ddrueding
Fixture
Nope. Just looking at goofy lenses.
Why? What would you use it for?
I was joking. LOL. Not going to spend 24k on a lens anytime soon. Even if I won the lottery I probably wouldn't buy that lens. I'd rather have the $18k 800mm f/5.6 if I was going to spend stupid money on a lens.
Nope. Just looking at goofy lenses.
I always thought that the smaller cameras were for those that couldn't swallow the larger bodies of real DSLRs. You are clearly not one of those people. What are you doing with an A7r anyway? Keeping up with both Canon and Nikon glass was too easy?
Don't you have some 5Ds? Do you consider them old sensors?
Since we're ranting vaguely, the autofocus for videos on the 7DII makes a noticeable noise even on external mics connected via the flash shoe. Not sure how to decouple that. Plan B is to switch to the lavalier hidden just off camera somewhere, but that is considerably less portable/mobile/convenient.
Not yet, though it would be a logical next step. We'll see how good the consulting work is in the next few months.
Thanks. Honestly I don't think my gear is a limiting factor at the moment, so maybe I should just be smart and not spend more money on photog stuff for a while.
This. A 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000x this!
I think there are probably twelve people on the planet who are limited by their gear and not themselves. Lunar is one of those twelve
(all without AC)
Damn. I need to find another option for the 5DsR RAW file conversions. Maybe DXO or C1?
I have no idea why Nikon would make a 24-70 with diffractive elements other than to prevent someone else from doing so. It's not needed to save weight in the smaller lenses.
If you need VR in a 24-70/2.8, the Tamron is a decent lens. Tokina has been making 28-70 and 24-70 lenses for years, and they have never been up to par compared to Nikon/Canon.
Buy a used Nikkor if money is tight.
Cryptic as usual!...I'm not a photographer... I screwed up the demo though.
Cryptic as usual!
I'm just a working stiff, not a photographer.
I don't believe in it, Bartender. Heating, yes, though not too much of it. I never heat the whole house, or even a whole room, just one small part of it, which all one needs to be comfortable in winter. As for air-conditioning, no. Just no. It is a crime against nature.
(I have AC at the shop where members of the public visit, but I hardly ever use it. It's a naturally cold building, and last summer I think I turned it on only twice. In winter, the shop is miserably cold and no amount of heating ever seems to warm it up much , so I generally don't bother anymore, just wear warm clothes. This mania for having everything heated to 25 degrees in winter and cooled to 17 degrees in summer is not just horribly irresponsible, it's unhealthy. Humans are perfectly capable of living comfortably in a wide range of temperatures and have done so for thousands, probably millions of years. My advice to most people is HTFU Princess.)
I'd agree that there are lines between someone who makes their living taking pictures and someone who takes their photography hobby as seriously as you do, but there aren't many lines and they are awfully thin.
Apparently I'm not quite normal.
I could see myself being a birder and shooting birds. Two problems:
1) Finding birds to shoot.
2) I'd have to shoot a w/300mm lens only. Could never afford more lens.
HUGE Nikon lens "price-gap" from 300mm to 400mm. The new 300mm F/4E PF is $2000 while the cheapest 400mm prime is $9500 (old) $12000 (new), f/2.8 only NO f/4 or f/5.6. Well I guess the 200-400mm is only $7000, and the 80-400mm is only $2700 but it's CRAP compared to the primes.
WISH Nikon had a cheap 400mm f/5.6 like <cough> Canon <cough>.
The 300mm f/4E PF with 1.4x extender is probably better than the 80-400mm and a bit cheaper too. Probably how I'd go in the future, aka next year, maybe.
Before the 100-400II I had a 170-500 Sigma that was complete crap. I'd get better shots using my 180 Macro and cropping. 300mm is not particularly bad for birding, as Lunar said there is no substitute for getting closer.