Don Haines said:
jdramirez said:
Some people will hate this... but if I am shooting a fast moving target, I will shoot in the center of the frame using the most sensitive AF points and snap away... and then I crop after the fact. Seriously... I don't need all 24 megapixels to make a great print... so I sacrifice a bunch to get the shot I want.
I do the same... It is a lot easier to work on composition and framing at home than out in the action...
Another rule of thumb is for shutter speed... go faster than 1/focal length. For a 200mm lens you need to be faster than 1/200 of a second....for 50mm, faster than 1/50th of a second.... and so on...
Another tip... lean on things..... rest your camera against a tree, on a railing, on a door... anything to help steady it for long focal length shots... if you are on a tripod set the shutter to delay mode to eliminate camera shake.... everything that works for the way you shoot is good.
To expand on yours... since you gave me a bit of inspiration... if you work in manual or aperture priority, think of the aperture and depth of field first. If you want a shallow depth of field, open up the aperture and vice versa. Think of that first before adjusting shutter speed and iso... but yes... get your shutter speed up to the 1/(focal length) at least.
Know where your gear is the sharpest, but don't be bound by it. If your lens is sharpest at f/8, but you want a shallow depth of field, around f/2.8... then go to f/2.8. If everyone took shots at f/8, it would be really boring because most images would look like really sharp camera phone images with practically everything in focus.
I am constantly leaning on things. Don't be afraid to use your own body as support. Put and elbow on the ground, or both elbows on your knees. That tends to be more stable. Also... press that view finder against your face. The red mark will go away... eventually.
I have a wired and a wireless shutter release... don't be afraid to get redundant accessories... because they have their place in your bag... and when you need to use a 2 body set up and one body is around yoru neck and the other is 100 feet across the stadium... you are going to be glad you had the wireless one.