She really seems to like her koala.
I suspect it is softer and nicer smelling than a real one. :|)(
She really seems to like her koala.
Meanwhile, the image looks overexposed and color does not look right. Do you have the RAW file?
...and for those wondering what the zoom capabilities of a 100-400 with a 2x on a 7DII was, this is uncropped.
View attachment 916
The zoom capability is 4:1.
Let's push our luck and see if this works:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/jijhkth6a09tg38/O15A4063.CR2?dl=0
The color would look better closer to daylight or a few hundred K below that rather than auto.
I can't really get the kind of IQ I want out of it. Is that level of detail typical from the 7D II or something about the lens?
^^ Nice shots.
1) Interesting building/outhouse. Crop seems kinda tight? I wanna see the whole building now.
2) Is that your pooch in the water? It's only going to be a cool 104 today but I'd still love to jump in that lake.
3) You water ski too?!? You are a renaissance man DD.
4) Did you use the 100-400 with or without the 2x extender? Looks like you had to crank up the ISO to get the shot.
According to the EXIF, #1 and 4 are at 400mm without a TC. #4 is only ISO 400. DD will have to explain what was done in PP to make it so grainy or why a shutter speed of 1/2000 at f/5.6 was used.
^^ Nice shots.
1) Interesting building/outhouse. Crop seems kinda tight? I wanna see the whole building now.
2) Is that your pooch in the water? It's only going to be a cool 104 today but I'd still love to jump in that lake.
3) You water ski too?!? You are a renaissance man DD.
4) Did you use the 100-400 with or without the 2x extender? Looks like you had to crank up the ISO to get the shot.
According to the EXIF, #1 and 4 are at 400mm without a TC. #4 is only ISO 400. DD will have to explain what was done in PP to make it so grainy or why a shutter speed of 1/2000 at f/5.6 was used.
I was wondering how you got the EXIF, then Doh, just download image and check properties. And yeah, what happened? ISO 400 shouldn't be that grainy?!? High crop maybe? As far as exposure it could have been an "Oh shit, take pic QUICK before bird flies away" type of deal with no time to play with exposure. Could have gotten ISO to 100 @ 1/500 (lens wide open @ f/5.6). Or 1/250 @ f/8 (lens probably sharper at f/ and rely on the IS to keep image sharp?
I'm getting more interested in being a birder but it will have to wait till next year, or killer sale, before I can get a tele lens.
^^ Nice shots.
1) Interesting building/outhouse. Crop seems kinda tight? I wanna see the whole building now.
2) Is that your pooch in the water? It's only going to be a cool 104 today but I'd still love to jump in that lake.
3) You water ski too?!? You are a renaissance man DD.
4) Did you use the 100-400 with or without the 2x extender? Looks like you had to crank up the ISO to get the shot.
According to the EXIF, #1 and 4 are at 400mm without a TC. #4 is only ISO 400. DD will have to explain what was done in PP to make it so grainy or why a shutter speed of 1/2000 at f/5.6 was used.
I was wondering how you got the EXIF, then Doh, just download image and check properties. And yeah, what happened? ISO 400 shouldn't be that grainy?!? High crop maybe? As far as exposure it could have been an "Oh shit, take pic QUICK before bird flies away" type of deal with no time to play with exposure. Could have gotten ISO to 100 @ 1/500 (lens wide open @ f/5.6). Or 1/250 @ f/8 (lens probably sharper at f/ and rely on the IS to keep image sharp?
I'm getting more interested in being a birder but it will have to wait till next year, or killer sale, before I can get a tele lens.
^^ OK I see your point about the texture in the green building shot. If I could I would have gotten the macro out and shot just the hell out of that building. The hinge, the antler door knob, the rust coming off the nails, green wood, willey sign, spider webs, etc. Love that type of stuff. For me the close crop was almost "painful" because my eyes were trying to zoom out the image. Some type of optical illusion, at least for my weakening eyes.
I like the wide shot of the building. Were the two shots taken at different times as the shadows are different?
ISO 400 isn't really that high, I guess the tighter crop on the bird brought out the grain. Can you guesstimate the distance to the bird? You had a 400mm lens on a crop sensor, so I wonder how small that bird would be at 300mm on a full-frame camera.
Maybe you mentioned it before and I forgot but what exposure mode are you using?
I've been using and liking "M"anual mode with auto-ISO. Forces me to check:
1) is shutter fast enough to eliminate shake and/or fast enough to stop motion?,
2) is aperture stopped down 1-2 stops or more if DOF is important for shot?
3) is resulting ISO low? Adjust # 1 & 2 to get best ISO/combo of the three.
If the images are worse than you expected then you need to figure out why and improve.
After a while you should be able to visualize what the final image will actually look like before you take it or before even lifting the camera.
The problem is that people tend to visualize what they want the image to look like.
That bird was at the top of a 75' tree that was 400'+ away. As Lunar said, it is just too far. As I'm sure everyone here knows, when you get back from a trip and realize most of the pictures are worse than you expected, your standards drop a bit.
Test.
More car photos to come.
Camera set to 14-bit RAW + FINE JPG image capture mode. I then used paint.net to resize JPGs to less than 8MB for free image host site.
Click once for "full-screen" sized image, click that image for full 6016x4016 image. Warning free image host site is very slow on FULL 24MP image download.
Edit: I should have used a CP filter. Sigh.
What do you mean by CP filter? You should work on composition. Also, are you cropping with that software?
Why would you take a picture from the shade side instead of the sunny side?
Why would you take a picture from the shade side instead of the sunny side?
Which is where technical know how comes in handy to make sure the highlights don't ruin the exposure. A polarizer can also help.Because the sunny side reflects the sun straight into the camera? I'm just guessing, but reflective surfaces and direct sunlight are usually highly problematic.
It's a good thing a car isn't bare metal.A polarizer does nothing for metal. It might help a little if paint is very waxy.