Any photographers in here?

I am starting to become a non-believer in NR. At least with nature shots, the noise doesn't bother me...

ISO 800 & cropped, no noise reduction:
 
I completely agree with your recommendation. Above that I recommend the D700.

Jersey, I highly recommend the 35mm f1.8 with the d40. It is very sharp especially for the price. Plus anywhere you look, the reviews for it are great.

As long as you are willing to zoom with your feet, it will produce much sharper photos then your 18-55 at all f-stops. Plus its great for low light shooting.

+1 on both.

The 35 1.8 works great for me on d40 and d70s, and I'm sure it's stellar on the other bodies as well.
 
This was taken with my Canon G11 and a umbrella/flash top right.

4564139333_b40ecbc4c0_b.jpg
I freakin love the g10/g11

Shot on a g10
IMG_2700.jpg
 
anyone used a Tamron 200-500mm lens? I'm reading lots of interesting web info, but I'd like to know if anyone has any first hand experience.
 
My speed6. Any comments or critique?

<a href="http://s16.photobucket.com/albums/b50/Usernametaken777/?action=view&current=mazdaspeed6Runnin.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i16.photobucket.com/albums/b50/Usernametaken777/mazdaspeed6Runnin.jpg" border="0" alt="Photobucket"></a>
 
Well if you are Ross then no, it looks pretty awesome, but why the copyright watermark?

If not, then don't be posting other people work claiming it as yours.
 
Looks good, cool idea. What font did you use? Also the blue part has some kind of texture?

I think the texture is from the paper they used.

Font is called "Travelling Typerwriter" for the lower text and "Arial Black" for the "Hello! my name is"
 
Well if you are Ross then no, it looks pretty awesome, but why the copyright watermark?

If not, then don't be posting other people work claiming it as yours.

Thanks.
Ya, I'm Ross, and I put it there so other people wont claim it as theirs :)
 
Looks underexposed to me. Also, I'm not sure what kind of working you're going for, but product photography is generally not about composition or creating any type of effect other than a very sharp photo of a product. you should crank up your f-stop and get rid of all the distractions in your background... go for something more like this:
 
Don't use your on camera flash... Unless you have pretty boss lighting, natural light is the best. That way, you won't create shadows. Make sure to over-expose the paper so that it's stark white. Also, don't forget the all important white balance!
 

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