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- 29,411
- Name
- Marcel
- Edit My Images
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How the hell do you do it?
I went to Formby yesterday to try and shoot some squirrels (not literally).
I did try and use AV mode as I sometimes do (or manual), but the lighting wasn't forgiving, even though it was a nice sunny day.
I had to up the ISO to 800 to get some decent speeds.
Anyway, I was resting on the fence posts as best I could. So much so I didn't even notice shake myself.
Trying to take shots, some which were coming out at 1/15 etc (obviously too shakey), but some much faster, up to 250 +
Now either this lens is very very soft to the point of being rubbish, or I'm shaking too much.
I tried everything I've read...Legs at a good stance, breathing slowly and laboured and calm, elbows tucked in....*be* a tripod...and I was also resting on fenceposts too where I could.
Got most of the way round and had time to review some of my shots (was with the wife and kids to photography had to take a backseat all day
), and they were all rubbish.
Got home last night, and not one squirrel shot is pleasing. I've deleted loads, marked more for deletion, with a possible tinker with one or two, which will only be good enough for web display only.
I know there is a rule of thumb, that the shutter speed shouldn't be any slower than the focal lengthof the lens.
Now even though it's a minimum of 1/320 at 300mm...Will that also mean a minimum of 1/320 at 70mm (on my 70-300). Or is it just the current focal length of the lens that goes into the equation.
That said, even at 70mm some of my shots were quite poor.
I would have thought that resting the camera flat onto the posts would have let me go slower than the length of the lens.
Any thoughts and ideas? I may post some shots later.
I know it's alot to learn, and alot of it takes practise, but I was hoping for at least one or two half decent ones from yesterday.
Not one of my 300mm shots were good enough.
I went to Formby yesterday to try and shoot some squirrels (not literally).
I did try and use AV mode as I sometimes do (or manual), but the lighting wasn't forgiving, even though it was a nice sunny day.
I had to up the ISO to 800 to get some decent speeds.
Anyway, I was resting on the fence posts as best I could. So much so I didn't even notice shake myself.
Trying to take shots, some which were coming out at 1/15 etc (obviously too shakey), but some much faster, up to 250 +
Now either this lens is very very soft to the point of being rubbish, or I'm shaking too much.
I tried everything I've read...Legs at a good stance, breathing slowly and laboured and calm, elbows tucked in....*be* a tripod...and I was also resting on fenceposts too where I could.
Got most of the way round and had time to review some of my shots (was with the wife and kids to photography had to take a backseat all day
Got home last night, and not one squirrel shot is pleasing. I've deleted loads, marked more for deletion, with a possible tinker with one or two, which will only be good enough for web display only.
I know there is a rule of thumb, that the shutter speed shouldn't be any slower than the focal lengthof the lens.
Now even though it's a minimum of 1/320 at 300mm...Will that also mean a minimum of 1/320 at 70mm (on my 70-300). Or is it just the current focal length of the lens that goes into the equation.
That said, even at 70mm some of my shots were quite poor.
I would have thought that resting the camera flat onto the posts would have let me go slower than the length of the lens.
Any thoughts and ideas? I may post some shots later.
I know it's alot to learn, and alot of it takes practise, but I was hoping for at least one or two half decent ones from yesterday.
Not one of my 300mm shots were good enough.

