|
Post by olroy2044 on Apr 26, 2013 12:40:43 GMT -5
Sorry it has taken so long to reply to Trul's question, but I will try. This one was easy. Jack seemed mesmerized by the camera, and stood still as a statue. I think he was watching his reflection in the lens. When they are moving around, I rely on old film techniques. I stop down, (usually to around f8) set the ISO to 400 or so, and shoot in aperture priority. This will generally give me a high enough shutter speed to help eliminate motion blur. I pick a spot where I can focus accurately, and wait for the animal to move to that spot (or distance) and rely on depth of field (and luck ) to do the rest. Now that the learning curve with my DSLR is flattening a little, I find my old film habits coming to the fore again. Match the ISO (film speed) to the subject at hand, plan the shot, then execute. I rarely bracket, now that I am getting familiar with the quirks of individual lenses. My M42 adapter is chipped, so that helps with the focusing, but my K-mount is a simple unchipped ring. The Canon finder is bright enough that I usually can focus fairly well. I have a split image screen, but have not installed it yet. My hands are still a little shaky from medication, so that will have to wait! Roy
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 26, 2013 15:59:35 GMT -5
Nice composition.
W
|
|
|
Post by olroy2044 on Apr 26, 2013 16:58:30 GMT -5
Thanks, Wayne
|
|
truls
Lifetime Member
Posts: 568
|
Post by truls on Apr 29, 2013 3:29:13 GMT -5
Thanks olroy for your pet photography tips & tricks, that is most kind. As Wayne says, your composition is most nice, vertical lines, diagonal lines, Jack, center of interest placed in the "golden mean". Maybe my pet photography suffer from Olympus Pen digital camera, I only have a display and no real viewfinder when focusing. But I will try to prefocus and set an aperture to get a greater depth of field. We have one dog and two cats, they move often so fast they are almost impossible to photograph, and they do not like cameras! Here is the only decent picture of our dog. It's a mix between Terrier and Siberian Husky a kind of winter dog, she loves snow. Olympus EPM1/Super Takumar 55/2.0 @5.6.
|
|
|
Post by genazzano on Jun 9, 2013 7:24:39 GMT -5
I really like these images of animals. We have these Rondine birds around the pool sweeping down so fast they are just a blur. I set up the camera on a tripod prefocused and when they would sweep down to the water, I would hit the trigger in the hope that I could catch one. I run about 20% success. I used my D70 at 1/8000 sec with a Pentax 645 lens. Even at that speed they are barely in focus.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 9, 2013 9:50:29 GMT -5
Fantastic shot of the Swallow, Genazzano. They are very small and very fast! Also, Truls, it's quite an achievement to make a white dog look wonderful against a white background.
W.
|
|
mickeyobe
Lifetime Member
Resident President
Posts: 7,280
|
Post by mickeyobe on Jun 9, 2013 9:51:44 GMT -5
Yes, I agree with you. Pet pictures are extremely difficult. Some people rely on skewering their pets with chain link fences. Others prefer to freeze them solid. I have a very high success rate due to 1. Perfect technique. 2. High shutter speed. 3. Precise capture of peak action. 4. My superbly trained reflexes. Mickey (aka Aleck)
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 9, 2013 9:55:38 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by olroy2044 on Jun 9, 2013 10:27:08 GMT -5
Dear Aleck Please don't ever change! We would not know who was using your avatar and might have to send these animals out to look for you! Especially the one and only SPEEDY SNAIL! ol(Calif smart ***)roy
|
|
mickeyobe
Lifetime Member
Resident President
Posts: 7,280
|
Post by mickeyobe on Jun 9, 2013 12:18:47 GMT -5
Roy,
Please don't call him Speedy. He will get a swelled shell.
I always say "Go Escargot". That really gets him moving.
Mickey
|
|
truls
Lifetime Member
Posts: 568
|
Post by truls on Jun 11, 2013 7:13:44 GMT -5
I love the snail, he (she???) is so big. Focus is perfect! I have to surrender my stubbornness and borrow my wife's digital Nikon with 400mm tele. I think the professional animal photographers (as Mickey and others) hide themselves and sneaks in with telephoto lens, with good results. If animals gets scared, no one is captured in their environment.
|
|
mickeyobe
Lifetime Member
Resident President
Posts: 7,280
|
Post by mickeyobe on Jun 11, 2013 13:15:05 GMT -5
Truls,
That big snail is less than an inch long with all four antennae fully extended.
The magic of photography.
Mickey
|
|
|
Post by Randy on Jun 11, 2013 17:25:29 GMT -5
It is magic...LOL!
|
|
mickeyobe
Lifetime Member
Resident President
Posts: 7,280
|
Post by mickeyobe on Jun 11, 2013 18:09:25 GMT -5
GRRRRRRRRRR
PSSSSSSSSSSST
Killer
|
|
|
Post by Randy on Jun 11, 2013 21:36:06 GMT -5
Now that's funny!
|
|