Macro photography
- MommaB
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Re: Macro photography
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Re: Macro photography
ok i see it now , tried all em lenses , and its a no go unless im very well positioned , pain in the ass
Whats a good iso for standard every usage ?
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- Norseman
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Re: Macro photography
All depends on the light situation really and the the lens you are using. You got some numbers on your lenses saying 3.5-5.6 or 4-5.6 and that says to me that those lenses isn't as good as a lens that has a number that says 2.8.
These numbers are the f-number and it tells me that those lenses of yours won't let as much light in as a lens that got an f-number of 2.8 and it also means that you need to raise the ISO more with those lenses.
The lens aperture is usually specified as an f-number, the ratio of focal length to effective aperture diameter. A lens typically has a set of marked "f-stops" that the f-number can be set to. A lower f-number denotes a greater aperture opening which allows more light to reach the film or image sensor.
Hope that is helpful
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Re: Macro photography
ok perfect . good info thanksNorseman wrote:All depends on the light situation really and the the lens you are using. You got some numbers on your lenses saying 3.5-5.6 or 4-5.6 and that says to me that those lenses isn't as good as a lens that has a number that says 2.8.
These numbers are the f-number and it tells me that those lenses of yours won't let as much light in as a lens that got an f-number of 2.8 and it also means that you need to raise the ISO more with those lenses.
The lens aperture is usually specified as an f-number, the ratio of focal length to effective aperture diameter. A lens typically has a set of marked "f-stops" that the f-number can be set to. A lower f-number denotes a greater aperture opening which allows more light to reach the film or image sensor.
Hope that is helpful
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- anova.330
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Re: Macro photography
I use a cheap 100X video camera that plugs into my USB. Then I take the video, slow down the replay of the finished video, and take screen shots. Effective for shaky hands...
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Re: Macro photography
Was just shopping Canon Canada , saw perfect lense lol , im like yep , exactly what i need .... just 1789$ ffs nearly fell on my ass , forgot how expensive this hobby isNorseman wrote:All depends on the light situation really and the the lens you are using. You got some numbers on your lenses saying 3.5-5.6 or 4-5.6 and that says to me that those lenses isn't as good as a lens that has a number that says 2.8.
These numbers are the f-number and it tells me that those lenses of yours won't let as much light in as a lens that got an f-number of 2.8 and it also means that you need to raise the ISO more with those lenses.
The lens aperture is usually specified as an f-number, the ratio of focal length to effective aperture diameter. A lens typically has a set of marked "f-stops" that the f-number can be set to. A lower f-number denotes a greater aperture opening which allows more light to reach the film or image sensor.
Hope that is helpful
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- Norseman
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Re: Macro photography
A total bargain right
Yeah photography is expensive, my Canon 1D house cost maybe around 3-4000€ and that is just the house. And to be able to use it you need lenses and they as you have seen does also cost a frigging fortune in many cases depending on what level you wanna get into.
But totally worth it when you see the quality you can get out on a print.
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Re: Macro photography
Its almost the downpayment on the new pickup im looking at ,50K damn it .Norseman wrote:A total bargain right
Yeah photography is expensive, my Canon 1D house cost maybe around 3-4000€ and that is just the house. And to be able to use it you need lenses and they as you have seen does also cost a frigging fortune in many cases depending on what level you wanna get into.
But totally worth it when you see the quality you can get out on a print.
ill learn to use what i have atm , got plenty on my plate with that lol
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- Keeno
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