This is a great lens with clean glass. Some minor scratches on lens barrel. It is the first series 70-200 2.8.
This is a great fisheye zoom. Very sharp and in mint condition.
Without going into step by step instructions which you can get on YouTube, keep in mind that the lighting on the new photo has to be virtually identical for the swap to look real.
I was skeptical about 12fps on the R5, so I tested mine. The mechanical shutter tops out at 8fps at 1/500 with a single battery installed. Adding the grip with two batteries and it does in fact shoot 12fps mechanical. The electronic shoots exactly 20fps with or without the grip.
Maybe one of the coolest but not the most beautiful IMHO
My EF 24-105 f/4 is wearing out after several hundred thousand exposures over a dozen years. I’m eyeing the 28-70 RF 2.0 because of it’s incredible speed. I’ll miss the 24 and 105 range but f-2.0 is just really enticing for weddings and certain sports like basketball under the hoop. I just recently bought a new RF 70-200 2.8 and it is way sharper than my old series-1 EF model. My only complaint is in the zoom itself. Because the lens diameter is so large it takes two hand turns to go from 70 to 200. This has cost me shots a few times on sport assignments.
Yes I've seen that movie. Excellent story with a photographic theme. Very moving.
Nice posing. However IMHO the images are too dark and in #2 she appears to be in a partial blink.
Most amusement parks have roving pros taking pictures all the time. Utilizing their skill would alleviate your anxiety and provide fulfillment options for everyone. I would do some research and call the park. Explain your large group situation and ask for the most experienced photographer. I’m sure they will oblige.
Are you sure PNG is a requirement? That seems to be the limiting factor for file size. You might try exporting as Jpeg with a 5 MB limit, then re-export as a PNG.
First start with a high camera angle. Divide the group by 4 an place the tallest toward the back. Separate the shortest 1/4 and place in front of the tallest. Ask medium sized people to kneel in front. If there are children, have them sit in the front row. For us on the second row in with your wide lens at its longest focal length if possible.
I seem to recall 669 being the Polaroid film type for RB’s and Hasselblad’s.
Me and my wife both laughed out loud!