Kneon Light
Well-known member
Have to say its a great life!! Not in any hurry to return to UK.Lovely stuff. Would love to live in the Falklands for six months, taking photos.
Have to say its a great life!! Not in any hurry to return to UK.Lovely stuff. Would love to live in the Falklands for six months, taking photos.
Jill… do you like owls?Some Short-eared owls from the weekend (along with an upset Northern harrier!)View attachment 157994View attachment 157995View attachment 157996
Excuse the self quote, but I had forgotten about this thread until now and it was interesting (to me) to look back on my post from May last year. Since then I've fallen quite far down the rabbit hole and picked up a used SonyA7riii with a used 200-600 lens. Also picked up a Laowa 90mm macro lens, a used nifty fifty and a few weeks ago a used Laowa 15mm f2 to try some astro with. Crazy when I think about it being less than a year I was declaring I was fine with the bridge camera. It really was frustrations not being able to do birds in flight well that pushed me over I think. That plus a health scare put me in a 'treat myself in the moment' mindset. No progress on underwater photography but I've somehow found myself a Birds NZ member and done a pelagic out to the sea canyons for bird photography.I've been doing some planting to restore some estuary up around the inlaws place and got quite into documenting the wildlife around there. This extended into taking photos for 'observations' for inaturalist which has become quite a fun hobby. A couple of months ago I brought a bridge camera (Nikon P950), which while it may not be a purists camera due to the small sensor etc, the zoom on it is perfect for observing and documenting wildlife. I have looked into maybe buying an APSC camera with a Sigma/Tamron zoom lens, but not going to commit to the expense unless I really get into the photography more. Currently I quite like the ability to just zoom, take a pic and walk away. Not super interested in camping out for hours to get pictures closer to wildlife. I may look to do some underwater photography as well to capture estuary fish life. The P950 is doing the job so far above water.
Lovely stuff. I absolutely love the A7iii.Excuse the self quote, but I had forgotten about this thread until now and it was interesting (to me) to look back on my post from May last year. Since then I've fallen quite far down the rabbit hole and picked up a used SonyA7riii with a used 200-600 lens. Also picked up a Laowa 90mm macro lens, a used nifty fifty and a few weeks ago a used Laowa 15mm f2 to try some astro with. Crazy when I think about it being less than a year I was declaring I was fine with the bridge camera. It really was frustrations not being able to do birds in flight well that pushed me over I think. That plus a health scare put me in a 'treat myself in the moment' mindset. No progress on underwater photography but I've somehow found myself a Birds NZ member and done a pelagic out to the sea canyons for bird photography.
Still improving as we always are. I went down to an area south of me 'The Catlins' on the weekend and went into beech forest where the lighting conditions were very challenging. Made a few mistakes, not sure how I bumped the f stop to f8 for a period when I was already struggling for light so I was lacking a bit of detail from underexposure and a lot of noise in a few shots. Can look almost painterly though.
Not sure if you are aware but the panasonic lenses are compatible with olympus. I think the Panasonic ones might be better from what i have read. I use them on my om-d em 10mk2. I have 14-140, 60mm sigma (sharp) a 100-300mm and 14mm prime. I have used a few others. All my lenses have been bought second hand from ebay no problems. I have used the panasonic equivalent of the 40-150 and it was ok. Iwill see if i can dig up some pics.Hoping for some lens advice please!
I've just bought the Olympus om-d e-m10 mark iv which came with the Olympus M.Zuiko Digital 14-42 mm F3.5-5.6 EZ Lens. I'm thinking about getting one more lens to compliment the 14-42mm. Would the Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 40-150 mm F4-5.6 II Lens give me much more zoom, or is there a lot of overlap of the two lenses? I've had a look at the 14-150mm but it's 3x the price.
If they don't compliment each other, what are some lightweight inexpensive options that would give me some extra range please?
Thank you! Yeah I've seen that they are compatible but they offer a similar range to the Olympus ones. What I'm not clear on is the difference between the 14-42mm and 40-150mm lenses. I guess I'm looking to see if I should just save my money and just stick with the 14-42mm for now if the two have a lot of overlap.Not sure if you are aware but the panasonic lenses are compatible with olympus. I think the Panasonic ones might be better from what i have read. I use them on my om-d em 10mk2. I have 14-140, 60mm sigma (sharp) a 100-300mm and 14mm prime. I have used a few others. All my lenses have been bought second hand from ebay no problems. I have used the panasonic equivalent of the 40-150 and it was ok. Iwill see if i can dig up some pics.
Thank you! Yeah I've seen that they are compatible but they offer a similar range to the Olympus ones. What I'm not clear on is the difference between the 14-42mm and 40-150mm lenses. I guess I'm looking to see if I should just save my money and just stick with the 14-42mm for now if the two have a lot of overlap.
Have you tried the +/- function for exposure. If your pictures are routinely coming out a little dark, dial in a bit of over-exposure (+) and see how it goes.Cheers, Mr Straw. I find that if I go at 1/500 shutter speed and with auto aperture and auto ISO the photos are still rather dark when taken indoors - even during daylight in a well light room with large windows and high ceilings. The acquaintance mentioned before did also have a fiddle and came to the same conclusion. What are your thoughts on a 40mm lens? They do seem to have great reviews for portrait/street photography which I suppose is pretty similar to photographing kids as you you're capturing a moment rather than photographing a posed scene.
I doubt if the lens will make any difference to your photos coming out a bit dark. Have you got a flash on your camera? I ask, as my Nikon hasn't. I believe this is a camera settings issue.Cheers, Mr Straw. I find that if I go at 1/500 shutter speed and with auto aperture and auto ISO the photos are still rather dark when taken indoors - even during daylight in a well light room with large windows and high ceilings. The acquaintance mentioned before did also have a fiddle and came to the same conclusion. What are your thoughts on a 40mm lens? They do seem to have great reviews for portrait/street photography which I suppose is pretty similar to photographing kids as you you're capturing a moment rather than photographing a posed scene.
It could be that the in-camera processing has over-sharpened the bird. Have you got a sharpness setting in your camera menu? If so, check that it's on zero. I assume you shoot in JPEG rather than RAW? Kneon Light is our resident bird photography expert. He will definitely know more about this than I do!A quick fire hand held snap the other evening on my Nikon P950.
Image almost looks photoshopped to me as it appears very 'flat' with an odd outline. I can't honestly remember if I was already in shutter speed mode, trying to capture birds in flight, or auto mode. Below are the figures:
shutter speed 1/800
100 ISO
62.5mm focal length.
Any experts any idea what's going on here?, and how I could improve upon this next time?
Could the 'flat' outline even be the Heron's markings doing weird things with human eyes against the sky backdrop? After all, it will naturally have markings designed to break up its outline when on the ground and in hunting mode.
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