Go to the HDR section of this site, give the same data and you might get a much more detailed and accurate response.
I use a Lowe camera backpack as my second carry-on, it goes under the seat. I have a Nikon D750 with a Tamron 150-600mm, a nifty 50, and an 85mm along with a monopod strapped to the outside. Never had any questions, but I do travel in 1st class which has fewer restrictions. Nothing like spending the kids inheritance.
Read your manual. There are 3 positions on this lens. Position #1 is for freezing the view finder image which will duplicate that view to the sensor when pushing half way down on the shutter button. Position #2 is for panning. Position #3 if for freezing the image when the shutter is snapped. I keep my lens on position #3 most of the time. For static shots I will sometimes use position #1. Hope this helps.
FrankSch wrote:
We did the Columbia River cruise in 2017. Great cruise, scenic, the tours were good, and so was the food. I don't believe American Cruise lines has any connection with Carnival. Enjoy your cruise.
Thanks for the input. I do not think that ACL would be so stupid as to dump any type of waste in the river. We are really looking forward to this vacation to get out of the horrible Denver area with all their crime and dealings with the new marijuana laws and influx of deviants who want to get rich over it. No TV and some rest time away from the city influences.
I have never gone on a cruise, have one planned for June on the Columbia River by American Cruise Lines. Wonder if they are affiliated with Carnival?
The story is worthy of the folded into a triangle flag that sits on my mantle. Thank you.
crazydaddio wrote:
Will try it....I would think that the wind would need to be 0 with leaf movement etc wrecking the bracketing. I suppose you could go into photoshop and mask the water area with the bracketed shots and then just use one of shots to do the unmasked areas around the water so the tree/leaf/cloud movement would be eliminated...
When you set up the stacking, check mark the "remove ghosting" box. That will help alleviate leaf movement and wind movement. You want the water movement so try it without the ghosting box checked also. See which is more desirable to you.
My daughter goes there every year on business and makes sure she is there for extra days. All of the above is very good info, and she adds the cemeteries. I have seen some of her photos of these ornate areas and they are not to be bypassed. Hope this helps.
Might try this method, which will cause a lot of grumbling from others.
Bracket your shots with the shutter speed around 1/250 or higher. Do not change anything and take at least 5 shots, maybe up to 10 shots or more. Make sure your camera is on a sturdy tripod (you can get vibration from the water if the falls are close and surging). Do this method for different locations of the same waterfall. Then, when you get home, do your post processing with stacking (this is not an HDR stack method since you have changed nothing). The only thing that changed is the water. When doing the stacking try it with 3, 5, 7 and 10 files, and you will find the right number of files to use. I really like doing this because you don't have a bunch of shake and no messing around with the ND filters. Good luck and if you do use this method I would love to see your results.
Love the area, went to college in Gunnison and skied at Crested Butte. Is the pass now paved on the west side??
no tats, no piercings, just a very simple series and beautiful model. Unusual but very nice for this forum, which I visit very rarely.
I got one of these for my daughter at Christmas. I took the time to download the manual and went thru it with her. I know, data overload. But she is 40 and has taken some great photos and she loves it. No more cell phone pics, but it is not a pocket camera. She does a lot of HDR merge. Simple camera to operate from the start and has many more advanced features to try out. She loves it!!
D5200 was my first DSLR, fairly light weight, excellent sensor (24 mg) and the lens is adequate. I put a 35mm 1.8f on it and to this day that combo works great. It is now my backup to my D750 (very heavy). When I am hiking in the nearby mountains all day, I take the D5200 with 18-140mm lens. That is all I need for good IQ. Stick with it, the camera will serve you well. And you are responsible for composition, not the camera.
Visited the grandkids in Wheatland, WY, and watched our 6yr old grandson wrestle in the 39 lb weight class. These kids were so small to quite large, but full of energy and lots of attitude/tears. The age limits were 3yrs to 13yrs. There were 7 towns represented and lots of noise. Quite a few girls participated. He placed 4th and was out of the metal round which brought more tears (losing is just horrible). Here are some photos of the action.
Lots of photo noise due to the high ISO and major cropping. No flashes were allowed on the floor level due to distraction. My first try at this kind of photography and it is not easy to get good action shots. Probably 15 clicks before one keeper. My hat is off to you sports shooters. Tough assignment.