eosbit said:I also find it curious that 7D shooters were never bothered by this. To me that says that hardly any professionals use the 7D.
That would be a mistaken assumption.
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eosbit said:I also find it curious that 7D shooters were never bothered by this. To me that says that hardly any professionals use the 7D.
eosbit said:I also find it curious that 7D shooters were never bothered by this. To me that says that hardly any professionals use the 7D.
awinphoto said:eosbit said:I also find it curious that 7D shooters were never bothered by this. To me that says that hardly any professionals use the 7D.
Think again, I used the 7d as my primary camera for almost 3 years since it was first released. Never bothered me once. To be fair weddings isn't my bread and butter but whenever I needed focus in dark areas, I never had to fear about missing shots... ever. It just grew to be practically second nature to me.
Pompo said:... Then again if you shoot stills subject this is not an issue, try shooting something fast, action, it dim light, a concert, a wedding dance even which aint fast at all, then you will see how bad this is
Yes, I'm in a similar predicament. Last night I shot a low light black suit event, mostly bouncing flash. Just for the exercise I put the 300 f/2.8 on the 5D3, cranked iso up to 6400 and picked out candid AL portraits of the guests. I wanted to see how AI Servo with single point selected would perform. Compared to the 1D4 in identical circumstances the 5D3 knocked my socks off. Where I managed to keep sight of the AF point the keepers rate was way above my expectations. If we had the red AF points visible, the only lost shots would have been from motion blur. I was astounded.Cyrano said:I shoot ballet dancers -- often in black leotards, running and jumping on a dark stage, under low light. I shoot in AI Servo mode, with a single AF point manually selected.Pompo said:... Then again if you shoot stills subject this is not an issue, try shooting something fast, action, it dim light, a concert, a wedding dance even which aint fast at all, then you will see how bad this is
I'm very concerned. I have a 1DX on order, and it may prove unsuitable for my primary use.
pwp said:Compared to the 1D4 in identical circumstances the 5D3 knocked my socks off.
My thoughts exactly. I'm sure there are a bunch of tricks Canon could pull to make this work. What immediately came to my mind was either turning off the light *just* before acquiring the exposure (surely should only take a few milliseconds? But would increase shutter lag..), or strobing the light so it appears constant to the user but would actually be providing enough information to the camera to expose properly under any combination of focus points, if there was enough processing power to do so. Or as you say HTH, just flashing the points.. Even as a menu option I would choose this. Anything would be better than nothing.John Thomas said:There are two paths which I see now:
1. Keep the AF point(s) lit and adjust for the amount of (over)exposure. Complicated, because there are many lookup tables to combine: many AF points, many AF modes (pinpoint, single, expansion etc.) and many exposure programs. However if the amount of light which each red square emits is additive (ie. the amount of light of 2 (adiacent) AF points is double than one AF point), or obeys to a single simple rule, then the things are fixable.
2. Alternate the phases: In fact, what means "AI Servo" - or rather "continous" exposure?
a.) Turn down the AF points (they will be black)
b.) Get the exposure
c.) (After, let's say) 300 ms turn the AF points on (they will became red)
d.) Keep them red for another 300 ms
e.) Go to a.)
The net effect is that the AF points will blink red while the metering is done inbetween.
Focusing should be done in the best case in parallel. Anyway It is not affected by the light in the way in which we discuss it here.
The second solution will have the advantages that A.) we'll see the camera is "working" (focusing, metering etc.) because the AF points are blinking and B.) we'll see also the subject between the AF point's blinks (here perhaps is better to turn off completely the AF point).
Thoughts? Comments?
HTH
briansquibb said:fiend said:I would really like to have a fix to this. It's annoying as hell. Trying to take pictures with ND-filter is almost impossible!
Is this for landscapes? If so is it an improvement when tethered to a laptop - does the AF point show black in liveview?
awinphoto said:Those of you guys who have problems with the VF... How many of you guys shot with the 7d and how many of you guys had similar issues?
pwp said:... Compared to the 1D4 in identical circumstances the 5D3 knocked my socks off. Where I managed to keep sight of the AF point the keepers rate was way above my expectations. If we had the red AF points visible, the only lost shots would have been from motion blur. I was astounded.
So what a pity Canon has set this camera up with such strong AF and all but murdered it's usability. Cancel the 1DX pre-order? It's a tough call...
PW
fiend said:briansquibb said:fiend said:I would really like to have a fix to this. It's annoying as hell. Trying to take pictures with ND-filter is almost impossible!
Is this for landscapes? If so is it an improvement when tethered to a laptop - does the AF point show black in liveview?
No, this was in Studio. Trying to use NDfilter for a shallow depth of field which was almost impossible. I have to guess where the focuspoint was. If I pushed the "fokuspoint-change"-button they all illuminated and I could see them but that don't work that I have to press them first to see where my focuspoint is.
Cyrano said:pwp said:... Compared to the 1D4 in identical circumstances the 5D3 knocked my socks off. Where I managed to keep sight of the AF point the keepers rate was way above my expectations. If we had the red AF points visible, the only lost shots would have been from motion blur. I was astounded.
So what a pity Canon has set this camera up with such strong AF and all but murdered it's usability. Cancel the 1DX pre-order? It's a tough call...
PW
You've just confirmed my fondest hopes and my worst fears.
The 1D4 does a great job overall for my dance work, but I lose too many shots to imperfect AF when the dancers are dimly lit and wearing low-contrast costumes. By all accounts, the AF system in the 1DX is brilliant in low light ... but if one can't keep it trained on the subject, it's useless.
briansquibb said:fiend said:briansquibb said:fiend said:I would really like to have a fix to this. It's annoying as hell. Trying to take pictures with ND-filter is almost impossible!
Is this for landscapes? If so is it an improvement when tethered to a laptop - does the AF point show black in liveview?
No, this was in Studio. Trying to use NDfilter for a shallow depth of field which was almost impossible. I have to guess where the focuspoint was. If I pushed the "fokuspoint-change"-button they all illuminated and I could see them but that don't work that I have to press them first to see where my focuspoint is.
Turn down the lights? Move them further away?
Well jeff ascough thinks other wise when using fast primes but what does he know lol he doesn't shoot test charts like you lolneuroanatomist said:briansquibb said:I would also guess that using fast lens makes the black AF points easier to see.
To a point - specifically, with an f/2.8 lens the viewfinder is as bright as it's going to get and the AF points are as dark as they're going to get, meaning maximum contrast. If you use lenses faster than f/2.8, the AF points actually get washed out - even though the standard focusing screen means the viewfinder doesn't get any brighter with lenses faster than f/2.8, the additional light does affect the transmissive LCD, such that with an f/1.2 lens, the AF point display appears light gray instead of black.
fiend said:briansquibb said:fiend said:briansquibb said:fiend said:I would really like to have a fix to this. It's annoying as hell. Trying to take pictures with ND-filter is almost impossible!
Is this for landscapes? If so is it an improvement when tethered to a laptop - does the AF point show black in liveview?
No, this was in Studio. Trying to use NDfilter for a shallow depth of field which was almost impossible. I have to guess where the focuspoint was. If I pushed the "fokuspoint-change"-button they all illuminated and I could see them but that don't work that I have to press them first to see where my focuspoint is.
Turn down the lights? Move them further away?
Not an optionthe lights are turned down to the lowest level and I don't want to move them further away. I want to be able to use ND-filters to get that 1.2 - 2.5 aperture in my studio when I want to. And that's kind of hard to achive without the ND-filters even if Im at ISO 50. (which is a must even if I use a 8x ND-filter).
I would like to see where my Focus point is. And in AI Servo-mode its REALLY impossible to see any focus point because it doesn't light up at any state anyhow. They are just all black against black..
briansquibb said:fiend said:briansquibb said:fiend said:briansquibb said:fiend said:I would really like to have a fix to this. It's annoying as hell. Trying to take pictures with ND-filter is almost impossible!
Is this for landscapes? If so is it an improvement when tethered to a laptop - does the AF point show black in liveview?
No, this was in Studio. Trying to use NDfilter for a shallow depth of field which was almost impossible. I have to guess where the focuspoint was. If I pushed the "fokuspoint-change"-button they all illuminated and I could see them but that don't work that I have to press them first to see where my focuspoint is.
Turn down the lights? Move them further away?
Not an optionthe lights are turned down to the lowest level and I don't want to move them further away. I want to be able to use ND-filters to get that 1.2 - 2.5 aperture in my studio when I want to. And that's kind of hard to achive without the ND-filters even if Im at ISO 50. (which is a must even if I use a 8x ND-filter).
I would like to see where my Focus point is. And in AI Servo-mode its REALLY impossible to see any focus point because it doesn't light up at any state anyhow. They are just all black against black..
The 7D has the option to show only the in use AF points - not the same for the 5D?