when shooting animals with long noses like dogs and cats it is best to focus on the bridge
of the nose and close down a stop or two below your sweet spot.
Good looking cat
why were the ants congregated?
The lens is compatible with your 7200 and there is nothing in the lens to fail unless the mirrors fall out.
What is your ISO set to and are you in manual?
What do you see when you go to live view?
that lens/camera combination is going to give you an effective max F stop of around f11-f13.
You will have to throw some high ISO at it to get any shutter speed.
are the images black or just too dark and underexposed?
BebuLamar wrote:
Keep in mind that although some camera manufacturers do use the term full frame for the 24mmx36mm sensor. I have not seen any manufacturer use the term crop.
Nikon comes pretty close to using it on their site:
"There is, of course, no crop factor present with the FX sensor."
http://www.nikonusa.com/en/learn-and-explore/a/products-and-innovation/the-dx-and-fx-formats.html
A filter requires the same precision and coatings as your lens in order to work properly.
If you're not willing to spend the bucks, you may as well spit on the lens and wipe it with your shirt tail
because the results will be the same.
tedfarren wrote:
Can someone please explain, in simple terms, the difference between crop and full frame cameras. Many thanks.
its all in the sensor size
can you hear/see the shutter tripping?
Do you still get a black image if you point the camer directly at a very bright light?
Send us a downloadable sample.
One of the benefits of this trchnique is that it does not compress the darker end of the range the way EBTR does.
You get the full range of black from edge to edge.
treasure the rolls you have.
One look at the current state of civilization in the east should tell you what happens
when you run out of trees to make more and have to use your hands.
reading the suggested tags, i get the idea it is a simple minded shape matcher.
Concentric circles = tire, more of them = vehicle, green = land, blue = water,
raggedy horizon = mountain, autumn colors= fall landscape, face = people, fan shape =tree,
All fuzzy = abstract, etc, etc
Then it assigns a value based on how often current images of that type are being viewed on facebook, google...
thank you for the images that bring back memories of my teenage years wandering around europe
before putting on the suit, tie and responsibilities of adulthood.
Don't get me wrong, all blurred, some blurred, or all sharp; each of them represent what our eye sees at any given moment.
None of them is anything other than reality, but and this is a big but:
Our eyes/brains shift and change and integrate a scene over a period of time and the image we "form" in our heads
will attempt to have defining edges or "shape", or separation of subject from back ground noise.
When the image you offer is so soft that it forces the viewer to constantly search for a focal point to rest on,
you introduce a stress that is often uncomfortable