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May 6, 2021 12:41:34   #
Canon Rebel T4i DLSR Camera with articulating View Screen & built-in Flash. Serial # 052033001343
18 Megapixels and Full HD 1080 Video. Purchased in 2012 now has less than 14,900 photos taken.
Firmware is up-to-date and also has Optional “Magic Lantern” software loaded on SD Card.
Canon Manuals in both English and Spanish.
Camera and lenses have lived in the desert so lenses are fungus free.
Camera with the Canon 10mm-22mm lens makes camera excellent for real estate.
Zeikos Battery Grip (holds 2 batteries) plus can power camera with 6 AA batteries.
2 Canon LP-E8 Batteries
Battery Charger
32GB Sandisk “Ultra” Memory card.
Canon Camera Strap (Unused)
Video Cable to connect camera to TV.
USB cable to connect to a computer.
Lowepro Carrying Case
Lenses: All Lenses have “Auto Focus”
Canon 18-55mm, F3.5-5.6 IS EFS “kit” lens. UV, Circular Polarizer filters & lens hood included.
Canon 55-250mm F4-5.6 IS EFS “kit” lens. UV, Circular Polarizer filters & lens hood included.
Canon 10-22mm F3.5-4.5 EFS Wide Angle Zoom for Real Estate/Landscape. UV, Circular Polarizer filters,
lens hood & separate Pearstone lens case included.
Canon 24mm F2.8 EFS “Pancake” (compact) lens great for videos.
Canon 50mm F1.8 lens - nifty fifty.
Tameron 18-270mm F3.5-6.3 “Walkaround” lens with a lens hood– Great for traveling
Camera and Tameron lens were factory serviced recently. Also included is a “Reversing Ring” which allows you to mount the 18-55 zoom lens backwards for “Macro” close-ups and a homemade bracket that allows you drape a tissue or any translucent material over the flash as a diffuser.
Asking $1,500 including shipping within the USA.


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Apr 25, 2020 11:18:00   #
Go to the 5th menu topic (brown) and to #5. Set to "Release shutter without lens" to "ON"
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Sep 11, 2017 12:23:24   #
kymarto wrote:
I have no idea, but there is resolution taken to an extreme. I'm hearing too that soon phones can or will have 50Mpx sensors. Technology marches on...


This is probably a stupid question but I assume that a pixel or photosite can only capture a single color or shade and assign a numerical value to the color or shade. Is that correct?
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Feb 5, 2016 10:06:32   #
DWU2 wrote:
What does the UHH community think of metal prints, such as these:

http://www.adoramapix.com/app/products/metal-prints/

Have you been pleased with the appearance? How do they look hung on a wall?


I have had some done by Bay Photo (12x18) and they are spectacular. They almost appear as 3D - much brighter than paper prints.
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Oct 19, 2015 10:40:01   #
I believe that the EFs lenses sit deeper into the camera body than EF lenses and the bigger mirror in a Full frame camera will actually hit the base of the EFs lens when a picture is snapped...
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Mar 7, 2015 12:31:11   #
rspmd23 wrote:
Anyone know if there is anything interesting at the Salton Sea now ? I will be in the area for a week and wondered if it's worthwhile to making the trip there to shoot. If so, any tips on where exactly to go and what to look for ?


I moved to La Quinta (just north of the sea) 16 years ago and have been to the Salton Sea just once. It is surrounded by agriculture. All the resorts that made the sea famous in the 50's & 60's are all long gone. I'd suggest you Google it and check out the Wikipedia write up about it. That should give you the best idea of what to expect. There are a lot more to see in the Joshua Tree State Park especially if you follow Rte 111 southeast from La Quinta/Indio down to Mecca and take Avenue 66 east to Box Canyon Road and follow it to the gate of the park. At the gate you can either proceed into the park or take I-10 back to Indio. If you have the time, you can follow Hwy 111 thru Mecca to the shore of the Salton Sea just to see what you aren't missing...

Box Canyon Road takes you through the San Andreas Fault and some amazing landscape as does Joshua Tree.

There are also some nice hiking trails into the Santa Rosa Mountains from La Quinta, Palm Desert and Palm Springs.

And the BNP Parabas Open Tennis Tournament.

Hope this helps.
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Feb 1, 2015 11:10:25   #
boberic wrote:
Pardon my ignorance but is focus stacking the same as bracketing? Unfamilliar with the term


Focus stacking is when you are taking a long shot - a landscape from close to the ground on a dull or low light day so that the depth of field is shorter than the total scene. you would use a tripod and focus in the forground, then refocus just beyond the first DOF and keep retaking the same shot moving the DOF until the entire scene is covered in focus. Then use software to merge all those shot to give you one totally in focus image.

Google: "Focus Stacking Tutorial"...
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Dec 12, 2013 17:08:34   #
ramcasty wrote:
Ok that means the reason why 2 original batteries cannot communicate with my canon 7D.

How come if I use it on my 60D works great.

Anyways, thanks for your time.

Ram


FWIW, I just read a post on the www.canonrumors.com website on how the canon 5D Mk3 lastest firmware update will not allow non-canon batteries. they did work before the update. Canon says it's design change is to protect their brand...
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Oct 16, 2013 13:47:10   #
CHOLLY wrote:
Noise, plain and simple.

The more pixels per given distance, the more cross-talk you have... that translates to noise.

The BIG advantage of APS-C sensors is the "multiplier" effect. Depending on which sensor, its from 1.4 or 1.5 times greater than a full frame.

So that 400mm zoom on a Full Frame becomes equivalent to a 600mm on an APS-C. Nothing to sneeze at when doing wildlife photography. :wink:


Thanks , that all make sense...

Tom
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Oct 16, 2013 13:38:26   #
Musket wrote:
I really dont get why it matters honestly. Will understanding pixel math help you take better photos?


It's more a question of understanding why a lower pixel density would give you a better picture. You have to agree that a picture printed at 100dpi is not the quality of a picture printed at 300+dpi...
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Oct 16, 2013 13:28:18   #
A "full frame" sensor has approx 864 sq mm of area.
An "Aps-c" (Canon) sensor has about 329 sq mm of area.

With those areas, a 22mp full frame sensor has about 26,000 pixels per square mm while a 18mp Aps-c (crop) sensor has about 55,000 pixels per square mm.

It would require a full frame sensor of 47.5mp to equal the pixel density of a Aps-c sensor.

With less than 1/2 the pixels per square mm, why is the full frame sensor thought to give better pictures?

I am assuming that a single pixel can only represent a single color/shade at any one time.

Tom
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Oct 2, 2013 13:24:24   #
JohninRockville wrote:
While I've been a Photoshop user for years I've had no real training and just basically learned some skills on my own and undoubtedly picked up any number of bad habits along the way. Can anyone recommend any online turorials or videos that have helped them make efficient use of the program? Granted as a retired teacher, a classroom situation would be better, I'm not inclined to drive 50 - 100 miles round trip on a regular basis.


Take a look at:
http://www.thedigitalphotographyconnection.com/

There is a membership charge but not too big and the tutorials are really good...
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Jul 16, 2013 16:22:20   #
Thanks to you all
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Jul 15, 2013 13:29:58   #
Thanks, I assumed that was the answer but I also knows what ass u me means...

Tom
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Jul 15, 2013 10:56:59   #
I searched but couldn't find the answer... Tamron makes a 90mm prime lens and a more expensive 90mm true Macro lens. I know that the Macro has a shorter working distance to provide actual 1:1 photos.

My question is: Is that the only difference? In other words, would both lenses produce the same photo of a sunset?

Thanks in advance!

Tom
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