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- LongLensPhotography
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I am having some hard time understanding the real point of IS.
While they seem to prevent horrible camera shake, at slower speeds (1/40s for 200mm for example) the images still seem to have a little softness. They are just usable for web or 5x7, and certainly no good for large printing. Even at very high speeds (1/4000s) they seem to throw in some duffers if I don't let it stabilise for a second, but just shoot on the move
It is still almost like it's best to use flash when it's darker or move to the 'safe' 1/160s+ by that time IS is just no more necessary.
I just got a deal on 70-200/4 IS, but I honestly fail to see how it is any better over my non-IS optically. Each has a very slight edge at different settings, and both are just as bad with 1.4x (slightly soft wide open, awful bokeh). The IS was supposed to be the killer feature, but I just don't get it. I briefly had 24-105 and came to similar conclusions.
Please explain.
While they seem to prevent horrible camera shake, at slower speeds (1/40s for 200mm for example) the images still seem to have a little softness. They are just usable for web or 5x7, and certainly no good for large printing. Even at very high speeds (1/4000s) they seem to throw in some duffers if I don't let it stabilise for a second, but just shoot on the move
It is still almost like it's best to use flash when it's darker or move to the 'safe' 1/160s+ by that time IS is just no more necessary.
I just got a deal on 70-200/4 IS, but I honestly fail to see how it is any better over my non-IS optically. Each has a very slight edge at different settings, and both are just as bad with 1.4x (slightly soft wide open, awful bokeh). The IS was supposed to be the killer feature, but I just don't get it. I briefly had 24-105 and came to similar conclusions.
Please explain.
