Try putting all images in the same folder before importing.
Be sure you’re in Library mode before selecting-all and then view/sort/capture time.
Can't comment on the A7R4 but I really like the Hummingbird shot. Well done!
Unless every picture you take is destined to be enlarged beyond 20x24 and viewed closer than 2 feet (does anybody?) megapixels beyond 20 are really overkill. I’ll take speed, focus accuracy and low noise over “image quality” any time.
The questions is whether camera manufacturers adopt the format SOOC.
Nice to see a more rural part of PG county. Most of it is very populated and commercial. Very nice image!
The single biggest reason to switch to mirrorless is focus, which is significantly better on the R5 and R6 than any other 5D series camera I've owned. (all of them) Using apertures wider than 2.8, you're lucky to get better than 75% sharp focus in real-world rapid shooting situations like weddings with any of them even after micro-fine tuning. The R5 will render tack-sharp images closer to 98% of the time. Silent shutter, 20 FPS, post viewing through the viewfinder, 1.6x sensor cropping, are just a few of the features that have improved my photography immensely.
Fantastic series. A cut above to be sure.
Nice job. I like the border too.
JohnSwanda wrote:
Did you add any layers in PS? Layered files can't be saved as JPG. You would have to flatten it first.
This is correct. I noticed this issue myself. Not sure why they changed it or from which version but I liked it the old way. It saved an extra step when adding my logo.
First I would abandon aperture priority mode. Manual will be less confusing. First determine your flash output indoors with little or no available light. Set you flash for manual mode at a fixed distance like 4, 5.6 or 8 feet. Shoot a set of test exposures to calculate. For instance at ISO 200 f8 may be 1/4 power, f11 1/2 power, f5.6 1/8 power. Once you’ve determined your flash output, go outside and test using the flash while adjusting shutter speed to match background exposure. Avoid situations where the background is darker than the foreground. If you need to adjust the distance of your flash use the f stop distance rule to calculate. If your test was done at 8 feet and you want a full stop more light, just move the flash to 5.6 feet. A stop less move to 11 feet. (the f-stop scale is more useful than many people think) I use my own feet as a measure. This may seem confusing to some but once you’ve determined your flash unit’s power, it’s easy to get accurate flash as either fill or main light without auto settings which are notoriously inaccurate.