Helpful Posts:
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1st April 2012, 02:40 PM
#1
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1st April 2012, 07:37 PM
#2
Re: Frog Wonderful
Yes, Marie, F5.6 is very shallow for that sort of shot. I would prefer to use at least F11 for scenes like that.
But I can't see what your other settings were so you may have been forced into a shallow focus by other constraints.
The exposure is fine, any more would just blow the highlights.
I think I would have a go at a different crop for #2. Possibly 5 x 4 ratio or even square would lose most of the very bright out of focus background at the top which I find distracting; and would concentrate more on the main subject.
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1st April 2012, 08:35 PM
#3
Re: Frog Wonderful
Thanks Geoff for commenting. I figured a northern leopard frog would pique your interest.
Geoff, this set here was actually shot at shutter speed 100, f10, 105mm, ISO 400. I used my closeup lens 500D on my 23-105 f4.0L lens. I am sorry for the confusion. The first ones I did NOT post I shot at f5.6. These here all were shot with the above settings. It was later in the day - about 6pm so light was limited. I am still shooting manual.
Hope that gives you enough information. I wonder if it would have worked better if I had my 70-300 lens on and backed up a bit. I have 1X, 2X, 4X and 10X 58mm closeup lenses as well.
Does this look better, now? I like this crop better. Thank you for the suggestion.
Looking forward to all comments and suggestions.
Marie
Last edited by Marie Hass; 1st April 2012 at 08:44 PM.
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1st April 2012, 09:20 PM
#4
Re: Frog Wonderful
Yes that looks better to me.
I don't think another lens would really help, unless these are substantial crops; you are quite close enough.
Possibly going to Iso 800 would have enabled the use of a smaller aperture, but at the risk of increased noise.
Just a 'silly suggestion' for the first and last images. How about a substantial crop which 'cuts the frog in half' and just shows the sharply focused areas? I think it may work and appear as though that was your original intention.
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1st April 2012, 09:21 PM
#5
Moderator
Re: Frog Wonderful
Hi Marie,
DoF may be limited, but you still have the focus in the correct place on the eyes.
S/he looks like they were a fairly relaxed model for you, for 1/100s they are pretty sharp too.
I usually shoot 3" dragon flies with my (Nikon) 70-300mm (and no CU lens), so that might have been an option - I don't think it would help much with DoF though.
For me the problem I see is actually slight over exposure.
I can't make up my mind if I prefer #2 or #3 though.
Cheers,
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1st April 2012, 09:43 PM
#6
Re: Frog Wonderful
I did that, Geoff, and the frog was quite startlingly "in your face". Scairt me! lololol. The only crop I did was to #3, to an 18X10 and the one crop you suggested.
Dave, thank you for your suggestions. I gave it a wee bit of a chill in the fridge. No harm, only in for 10 mins. It sat there warming up whist I took pictures.
Marie
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