Will Rickards
Storage Is My Life
Bought the 35mm 1.8 for $260 from B&H with a 52mm tiffen filter kit for $50. There were none at the local best buy. Should arrive in the next couple days.
Cheap filters are a bad idea.
Do they run the risk of damaging other equipment? Or just adverse effects on image quality?
Just image quality, Dave. They can be really, really bad, or they can be half-decent. Always good to avoid them though.
AFAIK, ND filters just increase the shutter speed.
Bought the 35mm 1.8 for $260 from B&H with a 52mm tiffen filter kit for $50. There were none at the local best buy. Should arrive in the next couple days.
For indoor shots I'm regularly at 800-1600 ISO. The trick is to get a body that can do that without too much noise.
Sol's comment about the ultra-narrow DOF at f1.8 is also a valid one. It took me some time with the camera on a tripod using the live-view LCD in a zoomed mode to get the DOF where I wanted it @ anything below ~f2.5.
I did need a macro rail, and this looks to do that and more.
Regarding the 35mm 1.8 lens. I normally shoot with the 70-300mm VR lens. I _really_ miss the VR. My first outing resulted in many blurry photos. I thought it would be fine and just use a larger aperture but none of the modes seemed to work like that. My kit lens isn't VR, so I'll definitely look into getting the VR version of that next.
So handheld might be an issue. But the other thing it was doing was forcing higher iso's. I really don't want to use ISO 800 but indoors it practically made me. Am I wrong expecting to be able to use ISO 200 or 400 indoors without the flash? Even in manual mode I couldn't seem to lock the ISO.
The next time I used it however it seems spot on and not very blurry. I guess I was just aware of the lack of VR and it was outdoors and sunny.
So I went and tried to shoot some flowers on the tripod to see if I could get really sharp photos. Tripod or not they looked the same. Still seem not really sharp but pretty good. I'm not sure if this is just that my camera is off by x and the lens is off by x and they are combining in this case unlike with my 70-300mm which seems to be pretty sharp on my camera. Maybe my expectations are too high. Do you think the D40 body is the limiting factor?
So overall getting more satisfied with it then I was initially but still not up to my expectations. I think rather than more lenses, I'll save up for a new body.
What nikon body are you talking about? I'd consider it but I only have about $400 maybe. I really want the D3 or D3S for their high iso performance but they are thousands of dollars even used.
What nikon body are you talking about? I'd consider it but I only have about $400 maybe. I really want the D3 or D3S for their high iso performance but they are thousands of dollars even used.
Does anyone use a gyro stabilizer?
My SanDisk Extreme Digital CF cards have "90MB/s" printed on them, but copies to the card are never faster than 15MB/s and from rarely exceed 30MB/s using a SanDisk Extreme USB2.0 reader.
I'd love to know what it would take to get closer to 90MB/s.
A new card reader that uses FW 800, USB 3.0, or eSATA. Even still, you're not going to get 90 MB/s. Maybe 75-80 MB/s or so...
Nope. I don't do much video.
I'm thinking about buying one for stills, not video. The primitive lead battery pack is turning me off though. Anybody have problems with SLA in the checked luggage?
Not up to a certain size. I don't remember exactly, but it is pretty darn big. Which Gyro were you looking at for stills? I assume you mean handheld?