my personal believes as a wildlife shooter is to use as fast a shutter speed as I can. it always meant more keepers !!neuroanatomist said:You can still be a handheld shooter, just realize that 1/FL won't cut it. That also means setting a minimum shutter speed or shooting in TV or M mode, unless Canon changes their firmware logic which still uses 1/FL (1/1.6xFL on crop).
AcutancePhotography said:Great point. The old rule-of-thumb of 1/f may be fading. The slowest shutter speed I use when hand holding is 1/2f and usually faster. The tiniest shake that I used to be able to get away with, is now more apparent, especially when crop zooming.
You can change this by up to +/- 3 stopsneuroanatomist said:You can still be a handheld shooter, just realize that 1/FL won't cut it. That also means setting a minimum shutter speed or shooting in TV or M mode, unless Canon changes their firmware logic which still uses 1/FL (1/1.6xFL on crop).
neuroanatomist said:You can still be a handheld shooter, just realize that 1/FL won't cut it. That also means setting a minimum shutter speed or shooting in TV or M mode, unless Canon changes their firmware logic which still uses 1/FL (1/1.6xFL on crop).
mkabi said:neuroanatomist said:You can still be a handheld shooter, just realize that 1/FL won't cut it. That also means setting a minimum shutter speed or shooting in TV or M mode, unless Canon changes their firmware logic which still uses 1/FL (1/1.6xFL on crop).
+1
But I think most of you guys that are pointing out 1/2FL and 1/2.5L are missing the point.
1/FL might have worked up to 12MP, may be even 16MP cameras.
But once it started getting into the 20s... you guys already started adjusting for it with 1/2FL and 1/2.5FL
So what will 50MP need? 1/3FL to 1/5FL????
jaayres20 said:That isn't too bad. I mean most of the time, as a portrait photographer, I will be using the 85 1.2 and the 200 f/2. I usually shoot the 200 at 1/400 anyway and that is a stop above focal length. I think it will be absolutely fine in 95% of situations.
AcutancePhotography said:jaayres20 said:That isn't too bad. I mean most of the time, as a portrait photographer, I will be using the 85 1.2 and the 200 f/2. I usually shoot the 200 at 1/400 anyway and that is a stop above focal length. I think it will be absolutely fine in 95% of situations.
Is the 56Dsr really the camera you would be looking at if you do portraits? I would not think any resolution advantage would outweigh the resolution disadvantages.
rs said:You can change this by up to +/- 3 stopsneuroanatomist said:You can still be a handheld shooter, just realize that 1/FL won't cut it. That also means setting a minimum shutter speed or shooting in TV or M mode, unless Canon changes their firmware logic which still uses 1/FL (1/1.6xFL on crop).
gary samples said:my personal believes as a wildlife shooter is to use as fast a shutter speed as I can. it always meant more keepers !!neuroanatomist said:You can still be a handheld shooter, just realize that 1/FL won't cut it. That also means setting a minimum shutter speed or shooting in TV or M mode, unless Canon changes their firmware logic which still uses 1/FL (1/1.6xFL on crop).
most of my work has been with birds @ 840mm 600+1.4 I learned the hard way 1xfL wasn't working 4/5 times fL was more like it
shooting early and late it was always a fight between shutter speed / iso / F/stop