Hi Brian,
If that was taken with your kit lens at 55mm, 300mm will help, but based on gut instinct, I'm not sure it would bring the subject close enough for a good quality shot.
To give you an idea, have a look at the grid of 9 shots of the red building (in a green landscape) on this web page (you need to scroll down the page a little to see it properly), it allows easy comparison of a shot at different focal lengths, with examples at 18, 24, 35, 55, 85, 105, 135, 200 and 300mm. At least it shows the ratio of change with focal length, even though you have a 1.5x crop sensor on your A58 (and therefore the absolute focal length figures for viewing that scene would differ).
I think your sunbird is smaller, as a percentage of image width, than the red building is in the 55mm example, but then at 300mm, the building does seem to be approaching half frame width, possibly allowing you to crop the rest. However, I wonder if you might have issues with camera shake, so you'd likely need your 'one legged tripod' trick for adding stability.
HTH, Dave
Last edited by Dave Humphries; 25th April 2016 at 07:31 AM.
Something to play with. The picture is from http://www.digitalcameraworld.com/20...me-your-image/
Draw a vertical line and extend the lines of the wanted angle of vieuw. There where they cross is wat's sharp on the sensor.
George
Last edited by george013; 25th April 2016 at 08:52 AM.
From another photographic forum the opinion seems to be that 300mm is about the minimum size of lens for wildlife photography.
There is a calculator on this size that could help - https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tu...era-lenses.htm
Dave
Hi Brian,
You also need to take into consideration how much you can safely crop in post, which will be to your advantage.
From the results you have posted over time and the IQ of some of the images I suspect you can afford to crop around 50% of the frame away with your camera. That is roughly the amount I feel is safe to crop with my old 12 mpx D300, IF I have taken a well exposed sharp image.
So if you can get reasonably close as you suggest and have a variety of types of bird you can have some fun
Brian- I will tell what has worked for me. I have a small woodlot on the south side of my property, about 160 Acres. I have set a cushiony wicker chair and table for setting my tablet, a beverage, whatever...... at the edge of the woodline. I will get comfortable, read a while, and soon the birds will become comfortable with me and begin to go about business. Now is the time to begin shooting, don't make sudden, jerky moves, burst shooting gives me the best results. The tablet comes in handy as I have an app that plays bird songs, This seems to have worked the few times that I have tried it.
Just for the record, I use a 300 mm prime: about 50% of the time manually focusing.
You could also consider constructing a blind that is complimentary to your landscape, might be interesting what you would come up with.
Last edited by JBW; 27th April 2016 at 02:04 AM.