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Posts for: dylee8
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Nov 21, 2016 11:03:13   #
For a long time I used Aperture Priority.

When I did that, to me it means two things:
1. I trust the camera's light meter more than doing it myself, which is definitely the case
2. Once the camera decided on the exposure, I select the Aperture, and the camera decides the speed

But before I shoot, I always checked the speed. If I did not like it, then I need to change it. E.g. if I set aperture to F11, and resulted in 1/40 sec, and I was shooting birds. Then I have 3 choices, and I decided what to do
1. change the aperture
2. exposure compensation
3. change ISO

I got a Nikon D750 last year, which has much better low light capabilities. I changed to auto ISO, which requires a Manual setting. So with the exposure triangle, I let the camera decide the ISO, while I set Aperture and Speed. But then again, before I shoot I check the camera ISO setting, and if not satisfactory I make adjustments.

This is what worked for me. I am sure you all have your own methods.
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Nov 20, 2016 12:59:52   #
Thanks Treepusher

Treepusher wrote:
Colorful for sure! Nice shots!
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Nov 20, 2016 12:59:06   #
Thank you jimmya. Actually I am in Florida. Let me check my profile if I make a mistake on that.
jimmya wrote:
Nice set of photos. I notice you make your home in SD. I lived in your fair state for a few years leaving there in 1981. I was in Rapid, where are you?
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Nov 20, 2016 12:58:08   #
Thank you cam20000. Yes it was quite wonderful.
cam20000 wrote:
Beautiful Dylee- How wonderful to take a trip to Peru & share your photography
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Nov 20, 2016 11:38:35   #
Just returned from a trip to Peru. Peruvians dress very colorfully. Street photography was a lot of fun. Here's a sample.


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Nov 4, 2016 09:51:27   #
Here's two from Florida Wetlands, taken earlier this year.


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Jul 9, 2016 03:26:06   #
margot12421 wrote:
I'm looking to buy an external flash for my d5100 but I have no idea where to start or what accessories I need to buy to make my camera and flash communicate?
I'm hoping to stay under or around 200 for the flash if possible
Any suggestions or help would be very appreciated!


I use flash very occasionally and find this good for my purposes:

https://www.amazon.com/Neewer-VK750-Speedlite-Display-Cameras/dp/B00GE4MNQA/ref=sr_1_3?s=photo&ie=UTF8&qid=1468048540&sr=1-3&keywords=neewer+flash
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May 22, 2016 11:50:11   #
Thank you all for your great comments. The pictures were taken two weeks ago at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in South Florida. The place was full of young chicks and lots of photographers.
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May 21, 2016 21:35:14   #
Sandhill Crane and Chick. Leisurely stroll in the afternoon.


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May 21, 2016 15:37:40   #
Blue Heron chicks anxiously waiting to be fed.


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May 20, 2016 07:45:53   #
I had the same need. I bought a Wimberley Sidekick (used, from MT Shooter). Works great for my Sigma 150-600C.

jcboy3 wrote:
Jim Bob has the ProMaster gimbal. It's a cheap POS. I know, I have one. I plan to upgrade. I'm sure the Nest is good; I've read a lot about it. But I'm looking for one that is more compact for travel.
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Feb 28, 2016 10:23:09   #
I have the Neewer VT750II for Nikon. It is an iTTL flash. I don't use flash often. When I do I mount this on my D7000 and is fully compatible. Don't know how it works as a Nikon master.

For $50 I have no complaints.

http://www.amazon.com/Neewer-VK750-Speedlite-Display-Cameras/dp/B00GE4MNQA/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1456671674&sr=8-3&keywords=neewer+flash


KM6VV wrote:
I started looking at ring lights for the Nikon D3300 DSLR. Simple enough, 24 LEDs arranged in a ring. Not expensive at about $30 USD. Several models on Amazon.

Then I did a little broader search, and discovered that Neewer also made flash ring lights. (For both Nikon and Canon). OK, more expensive, about $80 USD.

Has anyone used one of the Neewer lights/flashes? The flash is i-TTL; how compatible is it with Nikon's SB flashes? I have an SB700, and as the D3300 doesn't serve as a master, maybe the Neewer® Macro TTL Ring Flash Light can command my SB700 (remote)?
I started looking at ring lights for the Nikon D33... (show quote)
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Feb 5, 2016 09:23:01   #
I've shot wild life with a D7000 and 55-300 for a few years before upgrade. Here's my two cents:
1. You can never get enough length. However cropped 300mm (450 equivalent) is decent for wild life. Today I have a Nikon 28-300 and a Sigma 150-600. I found myself using the 28-300 quite often.
2. The bigger issue for 55-300 is not reach, but focusing speed. Once I upgraded to 28-300 my BIF success rate go up drastically.

My suggestion is that instead of extending 55-300, save your money and get a better 300+mm lens in the future.

tommckibbin wrote:
Hello folks. I have Nikon D3200 and 55-300 lens. Shoot mostly wildlife. Is there anything out there worthwhile anybody has used to extend as can't afford longer lens at moment.
Regards, Tom.
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Jan 23, 2016 10:55:06   #
John I agree with your observations.

From the same distance, cropped to the same size, the D7000 has a higher resolution (16MP vs 10.3). Therefore more details are showing.

the D7000 picture is brighter, but easily fixable through post processing.

However I think the D750 is smoother and better depth. And overall a better IQ.

Note also this is strictly an exercise in cropping/zooming. There are many other aspects to a camera - ISO, auto-focus, etc. D750 excelled in all those areas.

If we are to shoot this same picture with the two cameras - settings, composition, distance, lens might all be different with each camera.

What this seems to point out is that, for long zoom and cropping - needed for wild life photography - D7000, antiquated as it is, has the better reach through higher megapixel density. The D750 will need a longer zoom lens. Kinda what MT and others are saying.


JohnM wrote:
thanks Steve and Jerry! Doing my best to make the comparison equal by enlarging and sliding to get like next to like it looks to me like in many cases the D 7000 wins on clarity ( just for example being able to read the buttons on the models cloths) also, to my eye the colors seem just a bit brighter on the D 7000. Of course how would we know which is closer to true rendition?

I guess based on this I would have to say to close to call as to IQ?

Maybe I am missing something, if so, please tell me.

Thanks,

John
thanks Steve and Jerry! Doing my best to make the... (show quote)
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Jan 22, 2016 16:58:43   #
Thanks Bob. After re-doing the math your results make sense. This sounds fun I might try it out myself.

Bobspez wrote:
Do what I did. Go outdoors and hang a magazine cover with pictures and small print about 50 ft away. Set each cameras on the same tripod and use the same lens at iso-100, full zoom with the same lighting conditions and f stop in aperture mode on both cameras and take a couple of shots with each camera. The camera will adjust the exposure time that suits it's sensor. See which shots are best. That should answer your question for once and all.

I tried it with 3 cameras with FF, DX (1.5 crop factor) and CX (2.7 crop factor) sensors and my 55-300 lens at 300mm.

My experience is that the longer equivalent focal length trumps the shorter. Cropping the FF and DX images down to the same angle of view as the CX image, I got more fine detail with the DX than with the FF, and more fine detail with the CX sensor than the with DX. The equivalent focal lengths were 300mm for the FF, 450mm for the DX, and 810mm for the CX.

When I compared the file sizes and number of pixels in each of the images cropped to the same field of view, I found the CX image was about twice the file size and had more than twice as many pixels as the DX image, and the DX image was more than twice the file size and had more than twice as many pixels as the FF image. The FF is a 14MP sensor, the DX is a 14MP sensor and the CX is a 10MP sensor.

Have you tried cropping a D750 pic to the same field of view as a D7000 pic taken at the same distance with your lens at full zoom? Were both pics the same size with the same number of pixels? Does the D750 cropped pic have the same fine detail resolution as the D7000 pic, when both are viewed at full size? If so, then you don't need the D7000, but I would rely on my own eyes rather than a theory. To paraphrase Einstein ... In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.
Bob
Do what I did. Go outdoors and hang a magazine cov... (show quote)
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