Seriously, I prefer the RF 2x to the RF 1.4x on the 100-500mm, but the other way round with the 800mm f/11.Whaaaat Alan, not even 1600mm f/22? ?Nice photo of course!
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Seriously, I prefer the RF 2x to the RF 1.4x on the 100-500mm, but the other way round with the 800mm f/11.Whaaaat Alan, not even 1600mm f/22? ?Nice photo of course!
What witchery is this??? Surely not possible with that abomination!!Because of some crass comments about f/11 being so narrow and these lenses an abomination, I just nipped out and took a couple of evening shots with the 800mm f/11 + 1.4x @ 1120mm f/16 of a Blue Tit on my feeder, at over 13m (40ft) away. Here are two crops from the centre.
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Great shot Alan!!Because of some crass comments about f/11 being so narrow and these lenses an abomination, I just nipped out and took a couple of evening shots with the 800mm f/11 + 1.4x @ 1120mm f/16 of a Blue Tit on my feeder, at over 13m (40ft) away. Here are two crops from the centre.
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Not a great picture, but shows why blueberry growers are not fond of starlings.
Nice shots usern4cr. Great colors.More from the Knoxville Zoo aviary.
(R5 + RF 100-500L)
Budgerigar:
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Cockatiel:
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Cheers.
Great shot Jack!Haven't had time for much shooting but in the heat a week back or so the little remnant of a pond provided some fun.
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Nice photo, Click.Great Egret surrounded by aquatic flowers. It's very difficult to get details in their white feathers.
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Yes and yes.Nice photo, Click.
I've found that shots like this (to me) tend to really burn out the white(highlight) in the bird image since it's the only bright thing in the scene, and it's a small percentage of the area, and the rest is pretty dark. So unless you expose your shot at -2(or so) stops I end up with burnt out highlights which make seeing feather detail impossible. Some of my previous posts have a bit of burnout in the heads of birds from the sun since I didn't underexpose(or bracket) the image. I often try to bracket my exposures as -2, -1, 0 to avoid cases like this, but then I get triple the shots to wade through in post (and I already take too many) so it's a trade-off. Sometimes I just set it to -1/3 or -2/3 and take single exposures and tolerate a little loss of shadow in order to avoid most burnout and too many photos in post.