Helpful Posts:
0
-
9th February 2013, 04:57 PM
#1
Hover
Working on my catching my dog in motion. Not as sharp as it could be I guess. C & C welcome.
-
9th February 2013, 05:14 PM
#2
Moderator
Re: Hover
Good exposure and action capture Debbie,
I think it could be improved by applying LCE to just Gunther.
A bit like this;
Duplicate layer
LCE with USM 20%, 250px 0th.
Sharpen with USM 105% 0.3px 1th.
Erase/mask so background (unprocessed) show through all around Gunther.
Difference is subtle (flick between them in Lytebox), but it didn't need much.
Cheers,
-
9th February 2013, 05:31 PM
#3
Re: Hover
Thanks! Your edits give it just a little more POP!
-
9th February 2013, 11:18 PM
#4
Re: Hover
Hi Debbie... I like the shot. I love the ears flying up and the intense focus of your dog's eyes!
I was wondering about your equipment and settings for the shot. Some gear will do a better job on moving subjects than will other gear. Of course the settings on your camera including F/stop, shutter speed, auto focus etc. also make a great difference in quality of imagery you capture.
Most of us set up our shooting parameters differently for moving subjects than we do for stationary subjects.
I will most often use a relatively high ISO (around 320 or 400 **see below) so that I can keep my shuter speed fast. I will use SERVO AI (Canon's terminology) for my auto focus. F/stop (I will often shoot in aperture priority) depends on whether I want a shallow or deep depth of field which again depends on the type of subject I am shooting and what the background looks like. For most shooting, the default AF setting of my Canon 7D works pretty well but, there are times when I might want to tweak the autofocus to slightly different from the dfault setting... I will most often use center spot focus (with AF point expansion mode) but, may change this. I will most often shoot in burst mode. Whether I select the slow burst (3-FPS) or the fast burst (8 FPS) depends on how long I want to shoot the burst. Whether I have the IS on my 70-200mm f/4L IS on or off and whether I have it in mode-I or mode-2 depends greatly on what I am shooting. I will usually have the lens focus limiter set to 3 meters to infinity. This results in slightly faster focus becuse the lens doesn't have to shift from the minimum focus distance to infinity but, just from 3 meters to infinity a considerably shorter shift...
The Canon 40D, 50D, 60D and 7D cameras have a system of User Selected Modes in which the user can select the sets of parameters at which to shoot, register these parameters on a User Selected Mode (40D = 3 modes, 50D = 2 modes, 60D = 1 mode and the 7D - 3 modes) and then select all the parameters with one quick turn of the mode dial. I have one mode on my 7D set up for moving subjects. So when I want to switch from shoting stationary subjects to shooting moving subjects, I just have to twist the mode dial and I am completely and quickly ready for action.
Finally, it is easier for me to view a moving subject through the 7D eye level viewfinder than to use liveview.
** Calling ISO 320 or 400 "high" results from years in film photography when that was a high ISO...
Last edited by rpcrowe; 9th February 2013 at 11:39 PM.
-
10th February 2013, 05:26 PM
#5
Re: Hover
Thanks Richard! Well it looks like I'm well on my way to taking pictures as good as yours. I'm pretty much doing all the things you mentioned.
I'm a Nikon girl with a D90. I shoot manual. This one the settings were: f/8 1/1250 ISO 400 at 135mm on a 55-200mm lens. The camera was in its servo mode...although I goofed and had it in the slower of the two servo modes.
I took 30-40 shots and had 2-3 that I was pleased with. It really is something you have to practice. This is not a slow dog. You have to pan a bit as he's coming at you. Definitely needed to bump the ISO to get the shutter speed, which I don't like going much over 800 -1000. For my camera anything over that is too noisy. I don't know if thats a D90 thing or a me thing.
I will have to sit down with my manual and learn how to set myself some user defined settings. I know the camera can do it, I just haven't taken the time...yet.
Thanks for the feedback. I appreciate it.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules