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- Dave
- ILCE-1
- 600.0 mm
- ƒ/5
- 1/1600 sec
- ISO 400
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I don't really know either. It's not something I've tried. It's a wildlife specific lens and you pretty well always want to separate your subject from the background. I might try stopping it down on something static and see what it does at a typical wildlife distance.Hmm...how much more would you have to close the aperture to get full DoF?
Would ISO noise become a problem?
I have never shot with a lens that long, so I am asking because I don't know.
Yes, entirely normal.As I'm looking at the picture, I think I see an elongated hole in the upper beak.. Am I seeing that correctly?
Every day a school day!Interesting. I'd never noticed that until now. I checked with The Google's AI and got the following:
"The nare (nostril) of a flamingo is a small opening located dorsally (on the top side) near the base of its large, specialized beak. It is often obscured by feathers or difficult to spot clearly in general photos"
Hey, what do you know? I learned something new today!
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Every day a school day!
Would like to see some comparison shots if you try this.I don't really know either. It's not something I've tried. It's a wildlife specific lens and you pretty well always want to separate your subject from the background. I might try stopping it down on something static and see what it does at a typical wildlife distance.
Next time, I'd try to get rid of the focus blur.I don't really know either. It's not something I've tried. It's a wildlife specific lens and you pretty well always want to separate your subject from the background. I might try stopping it down on something static and see what it does at a typical wildlife distance.
There isn't any. It's absolutely sharp. When images are uploaded to the site, they are compressed. Makes some photos look absolutely awful.Next time, I'd try to get rid of the focus blur.
I am talking about the feathers on the neck. Not sharp.There isn't any. It's absolutely sharp. When images are uploaded to the site, they are compressed. Makes some photos look absolutely awful.
I see your point, and you've got me questioning things, which is good. I'm now unsure whether there is blurr or it's because the feathers are wet. The behaviour of flamingoes feeding means that the head and neck are almost always totally submerged.I am talking about the feathers on the neck. Not sharp.
But if it is good enough for you, OK.
On a 600 f4, probably 6.3-7.1 would be enough. On my 200 600 I shoot at 7.1 as a default because it's a perfect DOF. On the 400 800 I need more, f9 or 10, this is because of compression of perspective.Hmm...how much more would you have to close the aperture to get full DoF?
Would ISO noise become a problem?
I have never shot with a lens that long, so I am asking because I don't know.