Great shot. What was the exposure time?
30 secs at f/11 and ISO 100AZAG08 said:
Great shot. What was the exposure time?
AUDIO.fig96 said:
So photography related and I figure I'll ask here as someone around might be into shooting video: I'm going to shoot some interview style footage for a personal project over the next few days and was wondering if anyone had tips.
I've got a Nikon D5200 but can shoot 4k on my phone (Pixel) so I may try that direction. I've got a Gorillapod and will probably try using natural light as I've got a kitchen/dining area with lots of windows.
Any tips/ideas/things to watch out for? Thanks!
fig96 said:
So photography related and I figure I'll ask here as someone around might be into shooting video: I'm going to shoot some interview style footage for a personal project over the next few days and was wondering if anyone had tips.
I've got a Nikon D5200 but can shoot 4k on my phone (Pixel) so I may try that direction. I've got a Gorillapod and will probably try using natural light as I've got a kitchen/dining area with lots of windows.
Any tips/ideas/things to watch out for? Thanks!
Well,fig96 said:
Planning to just shoot locked off on the gorillapod, don't want to up the degree of difficulty too much
Good tip on the shutter speed, I was reading a recommendation earlier for 1/60 for 30fps and 1/48 for 24fps so I might try that (planning to shoot 24fps).
Appreciate the info, will let y'all know how it turns out.
Have 1/48 on my phoneAggieDruggist89 said:Well,fig96 said:
Planning to just shoot locked off on the gorillapod, don't want to up the degree of difficulty too much
Good tip on the shutter speed, I was reading a recommendation earlier for 1/60 for 30fps and 1/48 for 24fps so I might try that (planning to shoot 24fps).
Appreciate the info, will let y'all know how it turns out.
You probably won't find 1/48 sec setting. It will be 1/50.
And for digital media, youtube and vimeo... you'll be better off with 30 fps. And at 1/60 sec, and I don't know what lens you will use nor do I know if you want the background bokeh, aperture setting of f1.8 to f2.8 and at iso 100, it could potentially overexpose.. but I doubt it.
+1Rex Racer said:
This is too cool. I want one.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/friidesigns/trilens-change-lenses-in-the-blink-of-an-eye
Rex Racer said:
This is too cool. I want one.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/friidesigns/trilens-change-lenses-in-the-blink-of-an-eye
flintdragon said:
tighten up that belt!
There is no way I'd put a $$$ lens on that...
Well, yeah, I would never put my 70-200 on it. Way too darn heavy. But I have a couple of cheaper lenses I wouldn't mind hanging on it.Guitarsoup said:Rex Racer said:
This is too cool. I want one.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/friidesigns/trilens-change-lenses-in-the-blink-of-an-eye
Never. Those things are going to get banged around or won't lock right and fall. Heavier lenses like the 70-200 shouldn't hang from the lens mount like that, which is why the manufacturers put a tripod mount on the lens - so you don't do that
or move faster than a brisk walkGuitarsoup said:
Also plan to never sit down while wearing that
Rex Racer said:
This is too cool. I want one.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/friidesigns/trilens-change-lenses-in-the-blink-of-an-eye
It sounds like you are looking for something that is a bit higher quality and faster focus than the Sigma you have now. Faster focus speed will definitely help for shooting whales when you aren't sure where they will pop up. 300mm is already pretty decent reach for a lot of wildlife.Maximus_Meridius said:
Heading on a trip to Maine at the end of August. Acadia NP, whale watching, etc. I've got a Nikon D60 with the Tamron 28-70 f2.8 and the Sigma 100-300 f4.5-something. I figure the Tamron will be good enough for landscape shots (though I've long considered the Tokina wide angle), but I'm wondering if it would be worth renting a better, longer lens for the wildlife/whale stuff? Would having a 70-200 f2.8 be worth the rental? I'm not going to buy, I don't take enough photos to justify it, but I might can justify the rental if the potential for better pictures is high enough over the Sigma (and yes, I know it's slow).
Edit: also, if you would rent, what lens do you think would be suitable (aside from the aforementioned 70-200)? Also, I'm planning on having a polarizing filter, would a ND filter help with exposure on open water?