Livin The Dream
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Nah, the 85 1.4 is better [emoji13]








Which 70-200mm? My 70-200mm is sharper wide open than the 85mm f1.8G I had tbh, so maybe sample variation plays a part? Probably is the case as DXO score the 85mm 1 score sharper, but if you look at this to my eyes the 70-200 is sharper, even taking the CA into account. With the 85mm stopped down to f2.8 the 70-200 still looks fractionally sharper to my eyes. The 85mm would be my lens of choice if I was doing portraits though, the 70-200 is a bit of a lumpSharper and less lactic acid building up in your shoulder are the main thing.
The 85mm would be stopped down to f2.8 in theory if you were comparing which would improve it further.
Which 70-200mm? My 70-200mm is sharper wide open than the 85mm f1.8G I had tbh, so maybe sample variation plays a part? Probably is the case as DXO score the 85mm 1 score sharper, but if you look at this to my eyes the 70-200 is sharper, even taking the CA into account. With the 85mm stopped down to f2.8 the 70-200 still looks fractionally sharper to my eyes. The 85mm would be my lens of choice if I was doing portraits though, the 70-200 is a bit of a lump
http://www.the-digital-picture.com/...meraComp=614&SampleComp=0&FLIComp=1&APIComp=0
Nah, the 85 1.4 is better [emoji13]
De La Huliniere Christening-65 by Alan Cook, on FlickrThey were the f1.4'sYou and 85's don't mix. We all know that after listening to you rabbit on about how crap they all were for 50 pages when in reality you had a fubar'd camera like we all said. Did you listen? No.
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b****r! It's on my to do list once autumn kicks in a little more. Need to step my game up a little i think.

After a 2am start and a 7 hour round trip, The mist of corfe castle fail on meahh well you win some you lose some
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Which 70-200mm? My 70-200mm is sharper wide open than the 85mm f1.8G I had tbh, so maybe sample variation plays a part? Probably is the case as DXO score the 85mm 1 score sharper, but if you look at this to my eyes the 70-200 is sharper, even taking the CA into account. With the 85mm stopped down to f2.8 the 70-200 still looks fractionally sharper to my eyes. The 85mm would be my lens of choice if I was doing portraits though, the 70-200 is a bit of a lump
http://www.the-digital-picture.com/...meraComp=614&SampleComp=0&FLIComp=1&APIComp=0
Where's the fun in thatI have the vr2, might just stick with it and try not to spend any money![]()
Where's the fun in that
TBH I've given up on the 85mm idea, and for the extremely rare time I take a portrait I'll just use the 70-200.
I keep toying with joining a club in the hope of getting involved in different shooting opportunities but I'm a bit wary as read mixed reviews about camera clubs.I did order a new 70-300 yesterday
I have joined our local camera club so need to start taking a few more portraits.
I think you have been unlucky with the d750 you had, hopefully the new d750 will solve everything. Over the years Nikon have had a few problems with new releases, sadly it's the early models that are mainly affected. It's one reason I won't be buying a new model again, I would rather let the early adopters do the 'beta' testing and also benefit from the price drop too. If you read the thread that Stuart of lens hire has posted about canon 24-70 L IS mkII de-coating issues (13 out of 18 lenses affected) you wouldn't buy anything from any manufacturer ever again.I keep toying with joining a club in the hope of getting involved in different shooting opportunities but I'm a bit wary as read mixed reviews about camera clubs.
I'm not buying anymore lenses until I decide whether I'm sticking with Nikon or not. New D750's coming on Monday so that'll be the decider.
True enough. Nikon's inability to fix the problems, and on numerous occasions saying the camera is fine when it clearly wasn't only for them to find the fault later hasn't filled me full of confidence though should I have any future issues. Also the fact they calibrated my lens and camera together only to find it still needed adjusting and was different at the short end to the long end isn't good. I know this is an issue with zooms (begs the question why Nikon don't allow fine tune at both ends like Canon), but when it's been calibrated with the camera you'd expect it to be right all the way through the range.I think you have been unlucky with the d750 you had, hopefully the new d750 will solve everything. Over the years Nikon have had a few problems with new releases, sadly it's the early models that are mainly affected. It's one reason I won't be buying a new model again, I would rather let the early adopters do the 'beta' testing and also benefit from the price drop too. If you read the thread that Stuart of lens hire has posted about canon 24-70 L IS mkII de-coating issues (13 out of 18 lenses affected) you wouldn't buy anything from any manufacturer ever again.
That's fair enough, if they have 'calibrated' it (I say that as I do sometimes wonder what their calibration process and tolerances are) then it should be all good. I'm glad they have seen sense and are sending you a new d750, it's about time too. Nikons customer service seems to be awful at times and their reputation is taking a beating. Let's hope it's all solved for you. Your problems have put me off sending mine in as I'm going with the idea of if I can't see a problem why fix it, I don't want it to come back worse than it went in especially when I can't find a fault.True enough. Nikon's inability to fix the problems, and on numerous occasions saying the camera is fine when it clearly wasn't only for them to find the fault later hasn't filled me full of confidence though should I have any future issues. Also the fact they calibrated my lens and camera together only to find it still needed adjusting and was different at the short end to the long end isn't good. I know this is an issue with zooms (begs the question why Nikon don't allow fine tune at both ends like Canon), but when it's been calibrated with the camera you'd expect it to be right all the way through the range.
Yep, that's the only thing that stopped me swapping, £3500 for the body is silly money. Perhaps Canon's pricing will work out for the best for me and I'll fall in love with the D750 againThe reliability of my 750 hasn't been great but I'm buggered if I'm paying canons body prices. When I made the switch I lost out on a 70-200 but I'm back to where I was again now. The release of the new 5D has reaffirmed my decision, that price point is scandalous, or it is for a hobbyist like me.
Yep, that's the only thing that stopped me swapping, £3500 for the body is silly money. Perhaps Canon's pricing will work out for the best for me and I'll fall in love with the D750 again![]()
Benefits of upgrades are getting less and less tbh, especially in sensor performance. That being said I do wish the D750 had cross type sensors on the outer points (maybe the next gen will as I'm sure it'll have a tweaked version of the D5/D500 AF system) and as mentioned before it'd be nice if Nikon allowed 2 AF fine tune adjustments. Other than that I don't think I need anything else.I could see it panning out like that with Canon. I had a 5D2 but the 5D3 just wasn't attractive, especially at the silly premium. They have crafted the upgrade route now and demand that premium.
There's no lenses that I miss at all and so it was an obvious choice for me. I have considered the 810 to replace my 610 as that would be great for the studio stuff but I'm happy with the output I get, it's just GAS.
I can't really see how much of an improvement the next generations will have so be interesting to see whether any of those will be tempting. For once, I'm quite happy with what I have.
Benefits of upgrades are getting less and less tbh, especially in sensor performance. That being said I do wish the D750 had cross type sensors on the outer points (maybe the next gen will as I'm sure it'll have a tweaked version of the D5/D500 AF system) and as mentioned before it'd be nice if Nikon allowed 2 AF fine tune adjustments. Other than that I don't think I need anything else.
Oh, better AF in liveview
I did kind of expect a D750 and D810 replacement announced at photokina tbh but now that it wasn't I'm not expecting to hear anything until at least spring.
The D5 is a step back in terms of sensor (maybe Nikon instead of Sony sensor????), hope this is not a sign of things to come from Nikon.I wasn't surprised not to see replacements. There seems to have been flurry in recent years of upgrades to tempt consumers to buy. Upgrades have been coming quicker and quicker but I don't think technological advancement is moving as quickly now.
And it will depend whether the £1999 launch price of the replacement will be worth those small incremental changes, for me, probably not. Technology seems to have plateaued with sensors and so I'm quite happy with what I have for the medium term. The flagship models should be a guide and so the D5 isn't that much better for what I need a camera for.




I had the BR sport and never had a problem with the brad strap, maybe user error not fitting it rightI can't get the peak designs strap to work for me. With just the 50mm attached I can't get it to sit well.
I picked up the new black rapid sport breathe today and was initially impressed until the brad strap worked its way loose on back connection.
2 years in development apparantly and such a lousy job!!! Strap itself is great, but imo has a serious flaw!
I used the 24-120mm at a wedding (just as a guest) and was very happy with the performance. That being said as a guest AF speed wasn't critical, if it is then very little can compete with the Nikon 24-70mm f2.8.Whats peoples thoughts on the 24-120? I shoot weddings with a a 35-85 set up mostly, but also have a 24-70 for groups and dance shots, as these often get shot at F4+ anyway I am thinking about changing, the 24-120 won't be much use in poor light but if the lights bad enough to need F2.8 I would be using my primes anyway Im thinking it might be a decent option for groups, and for outdoor candids with the range.
I had the BR sport and never had a problem with the brad strap, maybe user error not fitting it right![]()
I didn't get on with the peak design slide first time around as I too found it didn't sit right. Hiwever I tried it again and now wouldn't use anything else. What's the difference this time around? Well I have one side attached to the lug on the camera and one attached to the tripod plate. First time around I just attached to both camera lugs.
Didn't know they'd redesigned it. Not good if they've made it worseThis is the new black rapid sport. Only arrived in shops on Tuesday.
The way the brad attaches is completely different from the older sport.