Cheers Dave Just realised what I said with "moon shot"; I'm nothing if not ambitious, I start my space programme tomorrow
Cheers Dave Just realised what I said with "moon shot"; I'm nothing if not ambitious, I start my space programme tomorrow
i actually found f/10 was sharper than f/20 when shooting, but that could also be because the shutter speed was lesser, but i used mirror lockup and self timer for my shots..
| Photographer |
Desktop - i7 930, XMS3 6x2GB DDR3, X58A-UD3R (rev2), 2xHD5870 1GB (CrossFireX), Crucial C300 64GB , 2x2TB WD Caviar Green, Corsair 650TX
Notebook - MacBook Pro 13" i5 Early 2011
My flickr
Hmm, went to check my exif and I apparently only shot at 281mm and f/8. I used self time but not mirror lockup, might have another go tonight if it's not too cloudy.
Nice shot by the way Bob Makes me think I should dial down the exposure of mine a bit.
crazy (24-03-2011)
Wow! You can really see the difference the extra resolving power makes to the observable features, particularly at the south pole. Still can't see the monolith though
g8ina (24-03-2011)
Was at an RSPB reserve the other day and was very lucky as I got this! It's quite a long sequence I know, but I wanted to show the whole thing so there we go! 4000 x 605 version here
g8ina (24-03-2011)
Last edited by tfboy; 02-04-2011 at 05:12 PM. Reason: added high res link
crazy (24-03-2011),roorooroo (24-03-2011),TheAnimus (25-03-2011),watercooled (24-03-2011)
Rob_B (24-03-2011)
| Photographer |
| Photographer |
Yeah they are, not sure if there's a way to tell how much but (and this may also be useless info as it may depend on screen resolution!) if I have it open in photoshop, it's about 50% zoom level.
Yes it does and I've been wondering about that to be honest because look at this picture (this is just a screen shot from the Nikon software, zoomed in quite a lot). Focus point is right on yet it was totally OOF. To get it in focus I had to keep aiming at the post below (probably about 30cm down it) then keep the shutter held and move back up, which should just refocus to the kingfisher in the same way as if I'd originally aimed there, and it would be in focus!? I have no idea what that means, but it was annoying!
If I am not mistaken, on most cameras on the normal focus setting doing that would just lock the focus to the post. So focusing on the post then moving to your subject would still have focus on the post.
There are other focus methods that adjust the focus as you move your camera, but if you couldn't focus on the bird in the first place, then this would be of no use.
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