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Thread: Last nights moon

  1. #1

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    Last nights moon

    Canon 70-300 lens handheld 1/200-F10-ISO 200

    Last nights moon

  2. #2
    JohnRostron's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    Looks nice and sharp for a handheld shot. Was this truly handheld, or were you bracing the camera/lens against anything.
    .

    John

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    Moderator Manfred M's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    Quote Originally Posted by lesno1 View Post
    Canon 70-300 lens handheld 1/200-F10-ISO 200
    Why f/10? Your subject is "at infinity" so far as your lens focus is concerned so shooting stopped down that far is more likely a recipe for camera shake than anything else.

  4. #4

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    Re: Last nights moon

    Well F10 seems to work ok for me what would you suggest ?

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    Re: Last nights moon

    I was leaning my shoulder on my door frame camera and lens were in my hand

  6. #6
    Moderator Manfred M's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    Quote Originally Posted by lesno1 View Post
    Well F10 seems to work ok for me what would you suggest ?
    I will tend to bracket aperture and start with wide open and work my way down. I assume that this shot at 300mm means that "wide open" is f/5.6 on your lens. With your camera you are shooting (EOS 700D) at a full-frame equivalent of 480mm, so a 1/200th sec exposure, even on a stabilized lens is pushing your luck when hand-holding, even in a braced shooting position like the one you were using.

    That being said, I tend to be a tripod shooter in order to maximize sharpness for these types of shots.

  7. #7
    joebranko's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    Quote Originally Posted by Manfred M View Post
    Why f/10? Your subject is "at infinity" so far as your lens focus is concerned so shooting stopped down that far is more likely a recipe for camera shake than anything else.
    So open the aperture and, thereby, reduce the exposure time?

  8. #8
    Moderator Dave Humphries's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    I know my Nikon 70-300 mm is better at between f/8 and f/11 than (wide open) at f/5.6, so I'd have probably done the same Les.

    Good result, perhaps just a tad over-sharpened when viewed at 100%.

    Dave

  9. #9
    Moderator Manfred M's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    Quote Originally Posted by joebranko View Post
    So open the aperture and, thereby, reduce the exposure time?
    For handheld at a long focal length, yes.

    When someone is shooting at a focal length close to 500mm FF equivalent, there can be a lot of camera movement even with image stabilization turned on. In fact, just keeping the lens on target can be challenging. I find a bit of camera motion will ruin an image far more quickly than the slight softening one finds shooting wider open.

  10. #10
    Shadowman's Avatar
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    Re: Last nights moon

    Nicely done.

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