At the moment, I have to love the Rebel as my 40D is somewhere in Canon repair land. That's unfortunate, as the local hockey season has just started and I'd like to document the progress of the team my husband works with as a trainer (It's just a minor league team with 15-18 year old boys.) So, I'll post a couple of shots from today and maybe someone can offer some tips to wring the most out of the camera (Canon Rebel/400D) and the lens. I mainly used the 85mm1.8 today but tried a few shots with the old 70-210 f4. It was actually OK for some shots but couldn't auto focus fast enough for most due to the horrible light in the arena. The photos will eventually be used on stats sheets and newsletter type materials.
Here are two shots. Both are shot through plexi-glass. The best spot, distance and light wise, was near the goalie at the top of the arena so that is where I stayed:
This one was taken with the 70-210. Now, this is not good, but the max shutter speed I could use here was 1/100 at f/4 and ISO 800. Any higher shutter speed and everything was just too dark. ISO 800 is really pushing it with my Rebel. I don't know what other versions are like, but I get grain and nasty colour distortion that starts at 800. 1600 is useless.
This was was with the 85mm1.8. Shutter speed was 1/640, f/1.8 and ISO 800. For both shots the WB was set at auto. I adjusted the levels in PS4.
For post processing, I ran the raw files through ACR via auto. That pretty much did the trick, but I also tweaked the luminance noise levels from between 20 and 50 to get rid of some splotchiness. In PS4, I used levels, noise (despeckle seemed to work better than just reduce noise) and USM for sharpening (between 150/5/2 and 300/4/1 depending on the photo).
I find that even at 100%, the images look pixelated and have coloured "bits" that look awful. Not knowing if it is the camera or what I'm doing, I'm kind of at a loss how to fix them. Flash would just reflect off the plexi-glass (and annoy the players). When I use the noise reduction in Photoshop, everything starts to blur.
Here are two of the same shot; one with no adjustments at all.
Straight out of the camera and converted to jpeg
Auto adjust in ACR, then adjusted the white level to 230. No sharpening or noise reduction.
I'm rambling! Any tips on taking hockey photos with the Rebel plus lens above and Post production would be gratefully appreciated. If I am asking too much out of my combo, be honest and I'll just muddle through the next few games
Myra