OP
MadeByMiller
Well-known member
Many thanks! I'm getting a little more comfortable. As I further understand how changing the camera settings affect the photo I am trying to also develop the scene lighting and composition. Not saying I'm good at any of it, but I am trying to get better! Every time I pull the camera out I'm learning something to apply towards the next outing.The photos are looking really good. Not sure on your lens setup, but I'm assuming the larger has a shoe mount, no? As you get to the bigger glass, the lens goes to the tripod, not the DSLR body. You should find yourself a remote bulb/timer for the camera. I'm out of the loop, but for our 5D MKII's, we used the Canon remote which worked great. I sold all of the kit (there was a lot!) with the business 4 years ago. Looking over the pics of our kids, the ones that clearly stand out were the ones taken with the 5Ds. We used an f2.8 28-70 and 70-200 L series glass for about everything. Nikon lent us a D3s /glass for a year or so and I loved that setup as well.
You are generally going to find less chromatic aberration and sharpness in that f4 to f8 range. ISO as low as possible as you've figured out![]()
My camera has a quick attach adapter installed on it for the tripod, I don't have a big boy lens that mounts directly to the tripod yet. Agreed on the remote shutter, I've been getting by with a two-second shutter delay but I know a remote would be better. Your 5D setup with the L-series lens was ultra fancy! My Rebel and the accompanying standard lenses are good for the hobby level wannabe stuff I think, but I definitely want to get a more lenses to play with.
I've found that shooting handheld indoors my hands are so shaky that I have to bump the ISO up higher to get a crisp image, 200-800 or even up to 1600 light dependent. I need to practice more so I can get more comfortable holding the camera steady. F-stop is one of the toughest things for me to nail. I get the principles and how adjusting it affects the image, but I don't have the experience yet to deploy the changes properly 100% of the time. On the camera's LCD screen I think it looks good, but when I view the shots on my big monitor I see how it could have been better. For example, this shot below was taken at f5 which I set intentionally to increase the bokeh outside of the red stamping, but once I viewed it on my monitor I noticed that I should have increased the f-stop because the bokeh is encroaching on the stamp that I wanted to be in focus.

I always appreciate your comments, thanks for stopping by and for your encouragement!























































