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#1
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This Sigma is not good
On Fri, 19 Jun 2020 13:13:19 +0200, Paul Carmichael
wrote: The Sigma 120-400mm 5.6 is the only tele/autofocus that I have. My other lenses are mostly Samyang primes. FYI, Review of the lens at imaging-resource.com https://www.imaging-resource.com/len...sm-apo/review/ Sharpness The 120-400mm is a fairly sharp lens, but its performance is optimized for the wider range of its focal length spectrum. As you zoom in towards the 400mm range, image sharpness degrades significantly. |
#2
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This Sigma is not good
On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 15:23:09 -0400, me wrote:
On Fri, 19 Jun 2020 13:13:19 +0200, Paul Carmichael wrote: The Sigma 120-400mm 5.6 is the only tele/autofocus that I have. My other lenses are mostly Samyang primes. FYI, Review of the lens at imaging-resource.com https://www.imaging-resource.com/len...sm-apo/review/ Sharpness The 120-400mm is a fairly sharp lens, but its performance is optimized for the wider range of its focal length spectrum. As you zoom in towards the 400mm range, image sharpness degrades significantly. and Between 300 and 400mm, performance when used wide open (ƒ/5.6) is nothing to write home about - very uneven and soft (3-5 blur units at 300mm, and 5-8 units at 400mm). Stopping down to ƒ/8 or ƒ/11 is necessary to get any kind of sharpness out of the lens at this focal length. Interestingly, image sharpness is better at ƒ/22-29 than when used wide open at these focal lengths. |
#3
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This Sigma is not good
On Jun 22, 2020, Paul Carmichael wrote
(in article ): On 22/06/2020 08:58, Paul Carmichael wrote: On 21/06/2020 21:24, me wrote: On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 15:23:09 -0400, wrote: On Fri, 19 Jun 2020 13:13:19 +0200, Paul Carmichael wrote: The Sigma 120-400mm 5.6 is the only tele/autofocus that I have. My other lenses are mostly Samyang primes. FYI, Review of the lens at imaging-resource.com https://www.imaging-resource.com/len...sm-apo/review/ Sharpness The 120-400mm is a fairly sharp lens, but its performance is optimized for the wider range of its focal length spectrum. As you zoom in towards the 400mm range, image sharpness degrades significantly. and Between 300 and 400mm, performance when used wide open (Æ’/5.6) is nothing to write home about - very uneven and soft (3-5 blur units at 300mm, and 5-8 units at 400mm). Stopping down to Æ’/8 or Æ’/11 is necessary to get any kind of sharpness out of the lens at this focal length. Interestingly, image sharpness is better at Æ’/22-29 than when used wide open at these focal lengths. Wow. Time to play... OK. I just went out onto the patio and took a few snaps at 400mm of stuff around the area. Here they are straight from the camera. I haven't touched them, so they're big. http://185.219.27.69:1961/tmp_delete_this_soon/ There you go! Those are just fine, and there seems to be nothing wrong with your Sigma. However, it seems to me that the blue, clear sky background field removes much of the foliage distraction shown in your problem bird shots. Note, the best of your bird shots was the one with the clear sky background. That makes me think that for the bird shots the focus point had missed the target leading to those soft results. At least you have some answers you can work with. Just remember that f/11 is not going to be the answer for all shots, and you will have to adjust all settings for different shooting environments. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#4
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This Sigma is not good
On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 13:46:36 +0200, Paul Carmichael
wrote: On 22/06/2020 13:43, Paul Carmichael wrote: OK. I just went out onto the patio and took a few snaps at 400mm of stuff around the area. Here they are straight from the camera. I haven't touched them, so they're big. http://185.219.27.69:1961/tmp_delete_this_soon/ f11.0 1/1000 iso400 AF stabiliser on, handheld. They look better. One other ting is they are much more contrasty for the focus to lock on. It would be helpful if you could show the focus point for on of the poorer flamingo shots. |
#5
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This Sigma is not good
On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 16:52:56 +0200, Paul Carmichael
wrote: On 22/06/2020 16:48, me wrote: On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 13:46:36 +0200, Paul Carmichael wrote: On 22/06/2020 13:43, Paul Carmichael wrote: OK. I just went out onto the patio and took a few snaps at 400mm of stuff around the area. Here they are straight from the camera. I haven't touched them, so they're big. http://185.219.27.69:1961/tmp_delete_this_soon/ f11.0 1/1000 iso400 AF stabiliser on, handheld. They look better. One other ting is they are much more contrasty for the focus to lock on. It would be helpful if you could show the focus point for on of the poorer flamingo shots. Will LR know that? Or would I have to load them into the Canon app? I believe this is a plugin available. Don't know if it's free. |
#6
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This Sigma is not good
On Jun 22, 2020, Paul Carmichael wrote
(in article ): On 22/06/2020 16:48, me wrote: On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 13:46:36 +0200, Paul Carmichael wrote: On 22/06/2020 13:43, Paul Carmichael wrote: OK. I just went out onto the patio and took a few snaps at 400mm of stuff around the area. Here they are straight from the camera. I haven't touched them, so they're big. http://185.219.27.69:1961/tmp_delete_this_soon/ f11.0 1/1000 iso400 AF stabiliser on, handheld. They look better. One other ting is they are much more contrasty for the focus to lock on. It would be helpful if you could show the focus point for on of the poorer flamingo shots. https://www.dropbox.com/s/9goddxv3to...74228.png?dl=0 Yup! I would say that having the focus point between two flamingoes misses either one. If you had been shooting at them with a rifle you would have been close, but there would be no hit, just a bewildered look from the flamingoes. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#7
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This Sigma is not good
On Jun 22, 2020, Paul Carmichael wrote
(in article ): On 22/06/2020 18:48, Savageduck wrote: On Jun 22, 2020, Paul Carmichael wrote (in article ): On 22/06/2020 16:48, me wrote: On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 13:46:36 +0200, Paul Carmichael wrote: On 22/06/2020 13:43, Paul Carmichael wrote: OK. I just went out onto the patio and took a few snaps at 400mm of stuff around the area. Here they are straight from the camera. I haven't touched them, so they're big. http://185.219.27.69:1961/tmp_delete_this_soon/ f11.0 1/1000 iso400 AF stabiliser on, handheld. They look better. One other ting is they are much more contrasty for the focus to lock on. It would be helpful if you could show the focus point for on of the poorer flamingo shots. https://www.dropbox.com/s/9goddxv3to...74228.png?dl=0 Yup! I would say that having the focus point between two flamingoes misses either one. If you had been shooting at them with a rifle you would have been close, but there would be no hit, just a bewildered look from the flamingoes. I think in the future I'll forget AF and just use my eyes. There is nothing wrong with using AF, just make sure that you have at least one of your subjects covered by the camera’s focus point. AF can be more accurate than aging eyes. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#8
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This Sigma is not good
On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 09:48:33 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On Jun 22, 2020, Paul Carmichael wrote (in article ): On 22/06/2020 16:48, me wrote: They look better. One other ting is they are much more contrasty for the focus to lock on. It would be helpful if you could show the focus point for on of the poorer flamingo shots. https://www.dropbox.com/s/9goddxv3to...74228.png?dl=0 Yup! I would say that having the focus point between two flamingoes misses either one. If you had been shooting at them with a rifle you would have been close, but there would be no hit, just a bewildered look from the flamingoes. Agreed. One thing to keep in mind for bird shots is that typically you want the eye(s) to be sharp. |
#9
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This Sigma is not good
On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 09:57:23 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On Jun 22, 2020, Paul Carmichael wrote (in article ): I think in the future I'll forget AF and just use my eyes. There is nothing wrong with using AF, just make sure that you have at least one of your subjects covered by the camera’s focus point. AF can be more accurate than aging eyes. For birds in flight you may wish to consider using continuous auto focus as the distance to the subject is continually changing. |
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