Christmas presents are probably already bought, but if you have any questions, fire away.
My most used camera has a 16MP sensor. MP is not really that important anymore. How big do you want to print? Most people don't do more than print small (Christmas cards) or post online. You'd be fine with 3MP for that.An Ag in CO said:
Any cameras with less than a 100 MP sensor any good?
Is a shutter speed range of 60 minutes to 1/2000th of a second acceptable or is it better to give up the longer end and be able to drop to 1/8000th of a second?
I did a photography FAQ back in 2007. I am working on updating it, as it sorely needs it a decade later.Quote:
Edit to add: Props to OP for the subject We could use a general photography thread that can be bumped at any time.
I've only shot volleyball once.flintdragon said:
Have any tips on taking indoor volleyball shots as far as settings go? I've read other blogs about it but my picture always seem not a sharp and also more grainy. Obviously lighting sucks indoors but the place I was at last weekend was ok lit.
Canon 60D - seems to be grainy at ISO 1600+
Canon 70-200 2.8 non-IS
The settings I've been using on full manual: 1/1000 SS, 2.8, 1600-2000 ISO.
Thanks! Awesome tips.Guitarsoup said:
1/800 did a pretty good job at freezing the ball and at 1/1600th it was very sharp. This was an A&M game in Reed.
The thing with volleyball is you are going to miss more than you hit. I found it best to pick a player and follow them on a play and hope they get a nice dig/set/kill depending on what you are going for. Get a nice one of them and move to the next player. By using that technique, you aren't trying to follow the ball and acquire focus constantly on quickly moving players. You can focus on one player and just follow them until you get the shot you want of them and then move on. This is especially true with a camera like the 60D, that isn't the best action camera. I believe only your center focus point is a cross-type, so stick to that.
To reduce grain, you need to nail your exposure. Bringing up exposure in post will likely introduce more grain. You are better off at ISO 3200 than ISO 1600 and then bringing it up +1 in Lightroom. It sometimes looks more pleasing to overexpose by 1/3rd stop, so test that out, but not if you are going over 3200.
Added a little blog on shooting volleyball along with some examples.
Read this tripod article by Thom Hogan. http://bythom.com/support.htmCromagnum said:
So besides the telephoto above, any thoughts for lenses for macro, wide angle, etc...that would be nice to have in the toolkit that my other two couldnt cover?
Thoughts and suggestions on a good tripod?
Guitarsoup said:
Canon makes a really good 10-22mm wide angle for crop sensors.
As far as mirrorless goes, I don't think it is quite ready to match up head to head with the DSLRs. Fuji and Sony are the closest. I personally really like Fuji and how the files look right out of camera, but Fuji and Adobe don't play well together and Lightroom doesn't do very good on Fuji files.heddleston said:
Guitarsoup, you've been crazy helpful with this stuff. I remember the OG photography mega thread and it really got me jumpstarted into it.
I'm mulling over either a) upgrading my old canon body (30d) in the next year to a used 70d or b) switching to mirrorless. Has mirrorless caught up yet? not seeing a very diverse or affordable glass selection, which makes me want to stay with full body. I know they make adapters, but i dont know how well those work.
How is your current gear limiting you and how do you wish it would be better.Quote:
These just aren't getting the job done for me anymore
Midtown SAHD said:
Great info, thanks. 70-200 it is, then.
I don't have it anymore, but I bought a 6" f6 Newtonian from Edmund Scientific back in the early 80's. I did manage to take a few pictures through it using a film camera using the focuser that came with it and an adapter. Once cameras started going digital, it seemed the focus plane got pushed back some and it was more difficult obtaining focus. I eventually had to replace the focuser on the scope with a lower profile one, and like you say the focus tube would actually protrude into the telescope's tube a little.Ag_of_08 said:
GS- know anything about mounting DSLRs(or in my case a m43 based camera) on telescopes? Trying to figure out if this adapter is the right way to go to mount the GH4 on to my newtonian that has the 2" focuser rack. Backfocusing is a big problem on newtonians, and if this would mate up correctly, it's probably low profile enough I can use an off-axis guider and still get focus (Don't know if you know, newtonians have an issue with focusing sometimes with a camera, because the blasted focuser intrudes into the optical tube) on my fairly fast(for a newtonian) f/5 OTA.
I don't have any knowledge of Astro photographyAg_of_08 said:
I has the non is version of that lens, if I ever get back into anything besides astro and drone photography, I'm going to get a converter and run it again. Absolutely adored it.