I am going to stay out of the 7d v 6d argument since both have their advantages/faults and I am waiting patiently (hard at my advanced age) to see what the 7d Mk II (or whatever) has to offer. But this picture is really impressive. Great post-processing on it. You have some serious talents and patience.jrista said:![]()
Taken well after sunset (I could barely see the bird with my eyes, almost pitch dark):
ISO 3200, 1/6th second f/4. Lifted ~ +1 1/3rd stop in post including shadow lifts.
Effective ISO: ~8500
The latter shot was quite a feat, however both were pretty dark scenes to my own eyes. I already had the camera set on ISO 3200 and forgot to adjust it for the bird shot, because I was more concerned about keeping everything stable. Even with a tripod, a 1/6th second shot of a bird without getting motion blur required a very careful hand. ISO 6400 would have only gotten me 1/10th of a second, which wouldn't have changed the other factors. The bird, a heron, thankfully stood entirely motionless the entire time. For an effective ISO 8500 shot, it is pretty darn good for the 7D and shows its metal. Given the shutter speed, and the fact that it really was NIGHT...you could see the faintest glow of deep red on the clouds over the mountains (which were behind me), but other than that, there wasn't any real available light that I could see...this easily compares to your ISO 12800 shot.
I stand by my assertion that wildlife never being out, about, and active during daylight hours is a myth. It's harder to find your "prey" for sure, but it is very far from impossible. It just takes a little practice and skill, like any other aspect of photography.
MichaelHodges said:Nice shots, Jrista. Those deer are pretty cute. You definitely know how to put your 7D to good use. But (and you knew this was coming) those were all in fantastic light.
MichaelHodges said:There's no question that wildlife can be out in the middle of the day. However, wildlife tends to be farther away in these situations, and usually it's harder to catch the sort of specialized behavioral activities that happen around crepuscular times, such as sparring, fighting, and hunting.
MichaelHodges said:I stand by my assertion that wildlife never being out, about, and active during daylight hours is a myth. It's harder to find your "prey" for sure, but it is very far from impossible. It just takes a little practice and skill, like any other aspect of photography.
That's not what I said, though.I said most wildlife comes out at dusk and dawn, which is true.
I agree with you that FPS is nice. But it's almost irrelevant when you can't stop the action. If a grizzly comes out of the brush at dawn, and you can't freeze the bear, all the FPS and buffer in the world is worthless. That's my problem with the 7D.
MichaelHodges said:Full frame will take you into another category of "light sucking". Even more so if you can slap on an F4 of F2.8 lens. You can be shooting well after the 7D is retired for the evening. Now, some may say you really should only shoot in the best light, but these people have never traveled 2,000 miles to film rare grizzly bears. The grizzlies choose the light, not you. So you take what you can get. And in this situation, the full frame sensitivity will buy you more chances than a few extra FPS.
MichaelHodges said:In Montana, during the white-tail rut and bighorn rut, it gets dark at 4:30 p.m. and light at 8: a.m. The sky is often cloudy. The 7D does a mediocre job in these conditions, which is why the people I shoot with have migrated to full frame.
MichaelHodges said:Anyway, cool shots. Thanks for sharing. I would be rude not to share my own now.Here's one from last December in the Montana wilderness with the 6D, at dusk and very poor light. Wild bighorn can be quite tricky.
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Don Haines said:I work on a site that includes a military firing range.... As a result, the area is closed to the public and there are great numbers of wildlife, including deer. The deer are most active in the morning and evening. They are harder to spot in the middle of the day as they tend to stay out of the "heat of the midday sun". At night the bed down in the tall grass.
So yes, they are more likely to be spotted with the sun lower in the sky, but I've never had a problem shooting them with a crop camera..... It only rifles that you con't shoot these deer with![]()
jrista said:Don Haines said:I work on a site that includes a military firing range.... As a result, the area is closed to the public and there are great numbers of wildlife, including deer. The deer are most active in the morning and evening. They are harder to spot in the middle of the day as they tend to stay out of the "heat of the midday sun". At night the bed down in the tall grass.
So yes, they are more likely to be spotted with the sun lower in the sky, but I've never had a problem shooting them with a crop camera..... It only rifles that you con't shoot these deer with![]()
Sure, animals are active around the extremes of the day. My point was that you don't have to wait for them to come to you...you can go to them as well. That's usually what I do with my 7D...I hike about and find the wildlife, wherever they are. At the right times of year, they tend not to be too dangerous or afraid either. The second photo I shared, of the yearling buck...he was incredibly curious about me, and would creep in slowly until he was about 7 feet away, then his fear would take over for just a moment and he would bound away, then go frolicking in circles around me for a while, before finally settling down again and giving me that ridiculously cute "OOOhhh, what is it! I'm SOOO CURIOUUUS!! I...just...have....to....get....a little closer.....nooooo! Hahaha!!" look. ;D ;D ;D Those shots were about 3pm in the afternoon in a meadow off the road hidden by a stand of treed during summer...so many hours before sunset (which was almost 9pm at that time.) I find deer like that all the time, and usually within 10 minutes of hiking into the woods to find a meadow somewhere.
During the rut, there is usually a period of time that starts about an hour before sunset and lasts until maybe 45 minutes after sunset where you are most likely to see two deer fighting. But earlier in the day, they kind of distance spar with each other, especially the younger bucks that don't have full racks. At least in Colorado here with the deer herds at Cherry Creek and Chatfield, the big bucks will usually have a following of yearling and two year bucks with them and their harem. These younger guys will frequently try their luck with a doe, and you can watch them chase a doe around for hours until the bull finally decides he doesn't like it, and chases the two-years off. By late afternoon, the bulls are starting to get into it...and that settles the younger bucks down. I have yet to actually photograph a fight, but I've captured sequences of big bulls corralling and controlling their does, sometimes chasing down the random stray girl.
So, at least given my experience tromping around the local state parks that I have easy access to, interesting wildlife activity is far from being restricted to just right at sunset or just right at dawn. You just have to spend the time finding it.
I've captured coyotes hunting in the afternoon on several occasions (I even shared a shot of a coyote trotting about in the afternoon light in my last post, as well as hunting before sunset in fine light). I've also caught them playing with each other before and after sunset, when there is and is not light. It's too restrictive to say sunset is the only time you can capture such activity...that's my point. And, even in the case of animals come out at dusk and dawn...they are usually out BEFORE the sun actually sets and AFTER the sun has risen for a time, so you have time (even if it is only about an hour) to photograph them in good light. I think my other low-light shot of the yearling buck after sunset in poor light also demonstrates that it isn't impossible to use the 7D in those conditions either...at least, it isn't as bad as you've made it sound.
In the case of traveling 2000 miles to film rare grizzly bears, I honestly have to say the 6D wouldn't be my choice. It would be a 5D III at least. If I was traveling that far to film and photograph bears, I'd probably be renting a 1D X. But I certainly wouldn't be using a 6D. So yes, I agree FF has the low-light touch, not denying that at all.
If we are talking about making legitimate arguments, I am specifically saying the 6D, even with it's light sensitivity, doesn't offer me anything even remotely compelling enough to use it as a wildlife camera.
If I lived in Montana, I'd be using FF as well. Still, it would be a 5D III or 1D X...not a 6D. The argument I'm making is quite specifically in regards to the use of the 6D as a wildlifers body...it isn't. It may have good high ISO performance...but it just isn't an action body.
MichaelHodges said:If we are talking about making legitimate arguments, I am specifically saying the 6D, even with it's light sensitivity, doesn't offer me anything even remotely compelling enough to use it as a wildlife camera.
You really should shoot it alongside the 7D. The IQ is just on another level, and the usability extends into prime wildlife times. My original point was that for $1999, don't get yesterdays sensor tech. Get the FF.
I'm a bit perplexed at the excitement for a 7D II at $1999. At that price point, you could have a 6D, which IMHO, is a superior wildlife camera.
I have no intentions to get yesterday's sensor tech.... That's why I am waiting for the 7D2.MichaelHodges said:You really should shoot it alongside the 7D. The IQ is just on another level, and the usability extends into prime wildlife times. My original point was that for $1999, don't get yesterdays sensor tech. Get the FF.
jrista said:I think this statement is radically premature: "don't get yesterdays sensor tech." The 7D II isn't even out yet. Regardless of what it ultimately is, it certainly won't be "yesterdays sensor tech". If it fuly lives up to the few things Canon has said about it, it should be a pretty amazing sensor. You can't write it off before it's even arrived!
Lurker said:I'll assume you expect the 7d II to be an incremental improvement, similar to how Canon manages the x0D line.
If this is the case there will be a lot of very disappointed people. The 7D was a huge improvement over the 50D and I expect the 7d II to be a huge improvement over the 70D.
Lurker said:I'm a bit perplexed at the excitement for a 7D II at $1999. At that price point, you could have a 6D, which IMHO, is a superior wildlife camera.
I don't get this statement unless you know something you're not telling us. You're making a decision on the 7d II based on performance of the 7D. This is just faulty logic. No one seems to know what the 7D II will be or if/when it will actually exist. You're comparing 4 yr old tech to current tech. I would hope the current tech would be better.
I'll assume you expect the 7d II to be an incremental improvement, similar to how Canon manages the x0D line.
If this is the case there will be a lot of very disappointed people. The 7D was a huge improvement over the 50D and I expect the 7d II to be a huge improvement over the 70D.
The only thing that seems to be certain is that either you'll be surprised by the 7d II or I'll be disappointed.
Don Haines said:BTW... Remember Tamron and the 150-600? The collective wisdom before release was that it would be a terrible lens and very soft.... Then the collective wisdom was that it would not focus properly... yet as people get thier hands on them they seem to be praising the lens, and the reviewers with borrowed copies are ordering thier own... Pre-judgement is not a precise science![]()
MichaelHodges said:jrista said:I think this statement is radically premature: "don't get yesterdays sensor tech." The 7D II isn't even out yet. Regardless of what it ultimately is, it certainly won't be "yesterdays sensor tech". If it fuly lives up to the few things Canon has said about it, it should be a pretty amazing sensor. You can't write it off before it's even arrived!
Basing a statement on proven physics isn't premature. There are a couple guide posts here as well: Canon continuing to lose the sensor IQ race, and the work they did on the 70D.
I hope the 7D II sensor is an improvement on the 70D sensor (which isn't impressive at all).
mkabi said:Lurker said:I'm a bit perplexed at the excitement for a 7D II at $1999. At that price point, you could have a 6D, which IMHO, is a superior wildlife camera.
I don't get this statement unless you know something you're not telling us. You're making a decision on the 7d II based on performance of the 7D. This is just faulty logic. No one seems to know what the 7D II will be or if/when it will actually exist. You're comparing 4 yr old tech to current tech. I would hope the current tech would be better.
I'll assume you expect the 7d II to be an incremental improvement, similar to how Canon manages the x0D line.
If this is the case there will be a lot of very disappointed people. The 7D was a huge improvement over the 50D and I expect the 7d II to be a huge improvement over the 70D.
The only thing that seems to be certain is that either you'll be surprised by the 7d II or I'll be disappointed.
True... 7D was a huge improvement over the 50D, but... 7D was a new line altogether from the x0D line....
7DII is not a new line... its a improvement from the 7D... an existing line.
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5DII to 5DIII - modest improvements
MichaelHodges said:If I lived in Montana, I'd be using FF as well. Still, it would be a 5D III or 1D X...not a 6D. The argument I'm making is quite specifically in regards to the use of the 6D as a wildlifers body...it isn't. It may have good high ISO performance...but it just isn't an action body.
Ovis canadensis, wild, Montana's northwest rainforest region. Full speed, full extension.
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It took me six days of single digits temps to get them to do that, lol. Throughout the sessions, I basically gave up on the 7D. It was too noisy, and had more trouble focusing in the worse light...even light that wasn't necessarily bad, but one shade such as dusk or sunrise light. It also wasn't as consistent as the 6D in burst mode, making the extra FPS seem irrelevant. This is about a 65% crop.
Yes, but you can not make comparisons across generations. It is possible that when the 7D2 comes out that the noise levels and ISO performance will approach the 5DIII, but that comparison is as unfair as comparing a 6D to a 7D. We could compare the 70D to a 5D2... they are close, but that's also an unfair comparison....MichaelHodges said:There's always room to push things and improve them. The question is how long is a photog wiling to wait? By the time theoretical wish-lists come to fruition, full frame sensors will be cheaper and the point will be moot.
As far as closing the gap with the 5D III anytime soon, that's a very unrealistic "if".
Noise matters. It will always matter. In the future, IQ is what's going to keep DLSR's alive amidst the smart phone horde.