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#11
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On Apr 30, 2018, David B. wrote
(in article ): On 30/04/2018 13:31, Savageduck wrote: Big cats are a start. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qrpea4ijzw3kxbl/DSC_3629-E.jpg That's a fantastic image! :-) https://www.dropbox.com/s/4uvzrovv5d4gvmr/DSC_3633-E.jpg They seem to know that they are photogenic. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qpfv07cuiki518s/DSC_3647.jpg -- Regards, Savageduck |
#12
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On 2018-04-30 12:31:07 +0000, Savageduck said:
lens they uses was a phone less broguth for under $20, but the mounting equipement the guides and movement systen came to $1000s WTF is a “phone less broguth”? A phone lens brought for under $20 Aah! “brought” Yah! "Brought" as something some one has taken with him/her. Could be hot really! APBs could be in order... :-ppp -- teleportation kills |
#13
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On 4/30/2018 12:23 PM, Savageduck wrote:
On Apr 30, 2018, David B. wrote (in article ): On 30/04/2018 13:31, Savageduck wrote: Big cats are a start. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qrpea4ijzw3kxbl/DSC_3629-E.jpg That's a fantastic image! :-) https://www.dropbox.com/s/4uvzrovv5d4gvmr/DSC_3633-E.jpg They seem to know that they are photogenic. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qpfv07cuiki518s/DSC_3647.jpg So does this guy: https://www.dropbox.com/s/hp33a9q8ffbiefz/20180421_animals%20birds%20reptile_2909-Edit.jpg?dl=0 And this guy thinks he is: https://www.dropbox.com/s/bte8bx2hib56q4b/_DSC8755-Edit.jpg?dl=0 -- PeterN |
#14
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On 30/04/2018 18:12, PeterN wrote:
On 4/30/2018 12:23 PM, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, David B. wrote (in article ): On 30/04/2018 13:31, Savageduck wrote: Big cats are a start. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qrpea4ijzw3kxbl/DSC_3629-E.jpg That's a fantastic image! :-) https://www.dropbox.com/s/4uvzrovv5d4gvmr/DSC_3633-E.jpg They seem to know that they are photogenic. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qpfv07cuiki518s/DSC_3647.jpg So does this guy: https://www.dropbox.com/s/hp33a9q8ffbiefz/20180421_animals%20birds%20reptile_2909-Edit.jpg?dl=0 He's magnificent! :-) On *MY* screen though, he looks a bit like a digital painting rather than a photograph. And this guy thinks he is: https://www.dropbox.com/s/bte8bx2hib56q4b/_DSC8755-Edit.jpg?dl=0 He's cute! -- David B. |
#15
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On Mon, 30 Apr 2018 07:49:09 -0700 (PDT), Whisky-dave
wrote: On Monday, 30 April 2018 13:31:15 UTC+1, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, Whisky-dave wrote (in ): On Monday, 30 April 2018 13:02:14 UTC+1, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, Whisky-dave wrote (in ): On Sunday, 29 April 2018 04:38:26 UTC+1, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 28, 2018, Eric Stevens wrote (in ): A YouTube video included the latest Nikon Rumours.. https://nikonrumors.com/2018/04/28/w...lash-468.aspx/ Good value even if you don't own a Nikon. That depends on the wildlife, and location, but I am getting ahead of myself. That is true the bit where you said depends on the wildlife. A recent david attenbought TV series where they photographed an ant mould the lens they uses was a phone less broguth for under $20, but the mounting equipement the guides and movement systen came to $1000s WTF is a “phone less broguth”? A phone lens brought for under $20 Aah! “brought” Yes all the letters are there just not necessarily in the right order. (from a morcambe and wise sktech but about musical notes) That's the amazing thing about the human brain well those that have one. ;-) https://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/arts-c...umbled-letters I had problems because my brain was looking for 'bought'. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#16
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On Apr 30, 2018, PeterN wrote
(in article ): On 4/30/2018 12:23 PM, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, David B. wrote (in article ): On 30/04/2018 13:31, Savageduck wrote: Big cats are a start. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qrpea4ijzw3kxbl/DSC_3629-E.jpg That's a fantastic image! :-) https://www.dropbox.com/s/4uvzrovv5d4gvmr/DSC_3633-E.jpg They seem to know that they are photogenic. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qpfv07cuiki518s/DSC_3647.jpg So does this guy: https://www.dropbox.com/s/hp33a9q8ffbiefz/20180421_animals%20birds%20reptile_2909-Edit.jpg?dl=0 However, he seems to be a tad oversharpened, and over saturated. I guess that was done in post since you couldn’t possibly get a shot that noisy and oversaturated out of a D500. I see from the EXIF that the saturation was pegged at +15, the vibrance at +12, and then you hit it with Dehaze at +17. It might be to your taste, but not to mine. And this guy thinks he is: https://www.dropbox.com/s/bte8bx2hib56q4b/_DSC8755-Edit.jpg?dl=0 He would be if he wasn’t OoF, I guess you were shooting through glass. It is also somewhat oversaturated. Again, I note that saturation is set at +66, and vibrance at +14! There are a few other settings I find odd, but I guess that is your process. I just find it strange to see such a low quality shot (to my eye) from a D800. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#17
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On Apr 30, 2018, Eric Stevens wrote
(in ): On Mon, 30 Apr 2018 07:49:09 -0700 (PDT), Whisky-dave wrote: On Monday, 30 April 2018 13:31:15 UTC+1, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, Whisky-dave wrote (in ): On Monday, 30 April 2018 13:02:14 UTC+1, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, Whisky-dave wrote (in ): On Sunday, 29 April 2018 04:38:26 UTC+1, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 28, 2018, Eric Stevens wrote (in ): A YouTube video included the latest Nikon Rumours.. https://nikonrumors.com/2018/04/28/w...lash-468.aspx/ Good value even if you don't own a Nikon. That depends on the wildlife, and location, but I am getting ahead of myself. That is true the bit where you said depends on the wildlife. A recent david attenbought TV series where they photographed an ant mould the lens they uses was a phone less broguth for under $20, but the mounting equipement the guides and movement systen came to $1000s WTF is a “phone less broguth”? A phone lens brought for under $20 Aah! “brought” Yes all the letters are there just not necessarily in the right order. (from a morcambe and wise sktech but about musical notes) That's the amazing thing about the human brain well those that have one. ;-) https://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/arts-c...ain-can-read-j umbled-letters I had problems because my brain was looking for 'bought'. Yours was not the only brain looking for ‘bought’. That is why I was still out there when he came back with ‘brought’, which made no sense at all. I also have a feeling that the ‘ant mould’ was meant to be an ‘ant mound’. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#18
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On Monday, April 30, 2018 at 4:27:21 PM UTC-4, Savageduck wrote:
On Apr 30, 2018, Eric Stevens wrote ... I had problems because my brain was looking for 'bought'. Yours was not the only brain looking for ‘bought’. That is why I was still out there when he came back with ‘brought’, which made no sense at all. I also have a feeling that the ‘ant mould’ was meant to be an ‘ant mound’. Typos happen. Fortunately, we're able to recover from them in many instances. In any case, I'm going to go back to Savageduck's comment of: "That depends on the wildlife, and location, but ..." It does depend on just what kind of wildlife, including the relevant environment, etc, and what one both wants, and what one is willing to commit to. For example, I try to make sure that my wife always has a good P&S when we're out gallivanting ... even if half of my motivation is to have a good camera to borrow if I don't have mine handy ;-) Thus said, I'll divide my wildlife endeavors into a couple of different lanes, with a what I've used (and did it work well). #1) 'Big Game' subjects, including birds In general, the trend here is for a telephoto, and one can never really have too much ... although with practical considerations on size (and cost) as well as zoom vs prime. I've used a Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8 on a crop body (1.6x) and 1.4x teleconverter, which is a film-equivalent of 150mm-450mm at f/4. I've found it to be a pretty versatile setup, as having a zoom helps to find subjects and zero in. Even though it is a bit weighty (7lbs?), it pack into a carry-on bag pretty well. But it is short for general birding, except for bigger birds and/or when you're able to get in really close (for finch-sized birds, "close" is less than 15ft). FWIW, a lens like the Canon EF 100-400 IS is a strong candidate here too; I'd be tempted to choose that today over the 70-200 with 1.4x. At the time, I went for the shorter-but-faster lens, not realizing what would happen soon thereafter with ISO sensitivity in digital technology. Going longer, I have a 400mm DO IS f/4, which stacked with the 1.6x body and 1.4x teleconverter is ~900mm @ f/5.6 The DO leaves some image quality to be desired (low contrast; to fix in post), but more important to note are that the field of view is very narrow and with no zoom, it takes some work (& practice, practice, practice) to get onto subjects. And even though the DO technology cuts down its size/weight, this is still a bit of a monster to haul (and get through airports as carry-on). But with a pretty close (30ft) subject, you'll fill the frame on a head shot like this: http://huntzinger.com/gallery/index.php/SAN/2016-cheetah-7Y8A1412 Similarly, for pulling in distant stuff, I've estimated this one as being ~400m (and also uncropped): http://huntzinger.com/gallery/index.php/SAN/2016-black_rhino-7Y8A2031-no_GPS All in all, I've found it to be a good addition, but I'm concerned about how much it may be left at home because it is a hassle to get into an aircraft carry-on, haul around, etc. There's something to be said about image quality and cropping ;-) #2) Stuff where "bigger telephoto" doesn't apply, which typically means a macro lenses for tiny stuff up close. For macro magnification, it really depends on what your intended subject is. I'm using a 60mm on a crop body (1.6x) which is roughly a 100mm equivalent ... I've thought about going longer, but I'm afraid that my eyesight to spot the critters (before bringing the camera to bear) isn't good enough anymore to be worth it ... plus my macro application is underwater, so there's more inherent motion which pulls me off of subjects. Especially in the shallows where there's more macro interest ... and more wave surge to push me around. As such, I'll stick with what I have. BTW, a set of extension tubes can also be occasionally handy tool too and they're cheap. These alter an existing lens's focus distances while being used ... moves them closer, which makes a non-macro lens closer to being a macro lens. The trade-off is that you won't be able to focus at infinity with the tube(s) in place. To be honest, I've not used my extension tubes on my land cameras much at all. -hh |
#19
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What lens for wildlife photography?
On 4/30/2018 4:12 PM, Savageduck wrote:
On Apr 30, 2018, PeterN wrote (in article ): On 4/30/2018 12:23 PM, Savageduck wrote: On Apr 30, 2018, David B. wrote (in article ): On 30/04/2018 13:31, Savageduck wrote: Big cats are a start. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qrpea4ijzw3kxbl/DSC_3629-E.jpg That's a fantastic image! :-) https://www.dropbox.com/s/4uvzrovv5d4gvmr/DSC_3633-E.jpg They seem to know that they are photogenic. https://www.dropbox.com/s/qpfv07cuiki518s/DSC_3647.jpg So does this guy: https://www.dropbox.com/s/hp33a9q8ffbiefz/20180421_animals%20birds%20reptile_2909-Edit.jpg?dl=0 However, he seems to be a tad oversharpened, and over saturated. I guess that was done in post since you couldn’t possibly get a shot that noisy and oversaturated out of a D500. I see from the EXIF that the saturation was pegged at +15, the vibrance at +12, and then you hit it with Dehaze at +17. It might be to your taste, but not to mine. And this guy thinks he is: https://www.dropbox.com/s/bte8bx2hib56q4b/_DSC8755-Edit.jpg?dl=0 He would be if he wasn’t OoF, I guess you were shooting through glass. It is also somewhat oversaturated. Again, I note that saturation is set at +66, and vibrance at +14! There are a few other settings I find odd, but I guess that is your process. I just find it strange to see such a low quality shot (to my eye) from a D800. Both are indeed low quality shots. They were saved in sRGB at low quality. As to my oversaturation, I am not shooting for a catalog, or scientific journal. I like doing an impression of the critters. But we have had that discussion before. I do appreciate your comments, even though we have different tastes. -- PeterN |
#20
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What lens for wildlife photography?
I wouldn't invest in a wildlife lens before looking at the
soon-to-be-released Questar 5. -- I agree with almost everything that you have said and almost everything that you will say in your entire life. usenet *at* davidillig dawt cawm |
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