Good morning. I am getting really frustrated. I take what I think look like decent pictures when I put them in Lightroom but when my husband sees them, he says they are blurry. I don’t know whether to get rid of my camera or my husband. Any suggestions?
Jerry G
Loc: Waterford, Michigan and Florida
Maybe your husband needs glasses.
warzone wrote:
Good morning. I am getting really frustrated. I take what I think look like decent pictures when I put them in Lightroom but when my husband sees them, he says they are blurry. I don’t know whether to get rid of my camera or my husband. Any suggestions?
JerryG may have a point. But I would enlarge on the computer screen a small-ish portion of the image with fine detail to see for myself if they are, in fact, blurry/out of focus. Do that, get back to us.
If you want more opinions on if a photo is blurry, or not.. post a couple here. Be sure to check "store original" so that the photos can be viewed better.
Don't be so hasty getting rid of your husband, he's just trying to make you a better photographer. (i hope)
Is it ok to post the pic here?
SqBear
Loc: Kansas, (South Central)
I am my own worst enemy on my photos and I too fell the majority of mine are blurred.
I will be interested in seeing what the group says about your as well, i'm sure i can learn from their suggestions.
I'm about ready to send my 18-105 lens in for repair/adjustment/auto focus, etc.?
when was the last time you checked your viewing focus adjustment. maybe your seeing it clear in the view finder, but its not what the camera is seeing. that adjustment doesn't move easily, but it can get jostled
warzone wrote:
Is it ok to post the pic here?
Please post a few examples. For this effort to be effective, you need to
store the original so the image can be downloaded and examined in detail on our end. The best choice is the original image directly from the camera. If you instead export the image from LR, be sure to include all the EXIF data with a minimum of edits.
You may need to fine tune your lens....I think...hard to tell without a photo.
Seems like most of the topics with this complaint turn out to be too slow a shutter speed - with blur coming from photographer and/or subject motion. But let's just keep on guessing!
Gene51
Loc: Yonkers, NY, now in LSD (LowerSlowerDelaware)
Before you do anything - post a couple of "blurry" images with store original box checked. This way it will be easier to determine why the images are blurry - you may not need to fine tune your lens. If you are shooting raw and processing in Lightroom, then you may need to add some sharpening, clarity and dehaze adjustments. You many need to use a faster shutter speed. You may need to turn on optical stabilization, etc etc etc. This is purely hypothetical until we can see what you are talking about.
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