I see a lot of people would a7riii that just absolutely suck at photography.
I see a lot of people would a7riii that just absolutely suck at photography.
I think they just stick it in auto and expect the camera to do everything for them. I have only really wasted my first DSLR and that was due to lack of talent. Everything else I think I have shot pretty well with for the most part.I'm seriously thinking of picking one up
And yeah Ultimately It's about skill. I see a lot of people would a7riii that just absolutely suck at photography. No amount of editing is going to make their work look good or interesting
Here's the thing, the Canon lens should be sharper, better colors (subjective). Just be careful with your combo as the body and the lens aren't stabilized, don't expect miracles indoors at f/2.8 and slow shutter speeds if you shake. If you are doing paid gigs indoors, take a tripod, borrow a flash (bounce it or use a diffuser), play around, and it should be a big step up from the 17-50 and APS-C body for sure.Great, I'll pick it up. I have an 800D that I started with, and picked up a 5D Classic for cheap to dip my toes into full frame. I'm starting to take on small paid gigs for headshots and theatre photography and my best lens is the Sigma EF-S 17-50mm f2.8, so this would be a big step up. I'll then sell the 5D and Sigma and keep the 800D and kit lens for the few times I need to do video.
I'm just hoping the RX1R MK3 is faster and has good battery life, it'll be my carry everywhere camera........or a used Q1. I'm hoping the Q2 and the upcoming Zeiss cameras will drive the prices down.Any modern camera will not be used to its full potential by 99% of people that buy it. Never been a better time to be a photographer.
I have memories of my Sigma 17-50 being quite inaccurate AF wise, yeah sell it. If you're doing paid gigs get really good with on camera flash. I know a photographer that never got good with it and his event shots are shit. For headshots get an 85 1.8 at the bare minimum and learn how to off camera lighting. Youtube videos and hands on experiments are pretty much the best for this type of stuff. There are ways to do it with one light source and more, I just started using three light sources for work and the stuff took a notable step up in quality, but it helps if you know how to diffuse light.Great, I'll pick it up. I have an 800D that I started with, and picked up a 5D Classic for cheap to dip my toes into full frame. I'm starting to take on small paid gigs for headshots and theatre photography and my best lens is the Sigma EF-S 17-50mm f2.8, so this would be a big step up. I'll then sell the 5D and Sigma and keep the 800D and kit lens for the few times I need to do video.
That sounds like a pretty extreme time to be typing a message!That should be with* but I touched my eye and still had Serrano pepper on it so I typed that post while crying and sticking my head in and out of the shower trying to wash my face off
That sounds like a pretty extreme time to be typing a message!
I'm sitting here doing my best to not preorder a 135GM, I'm deciding between that and a 24-70GM. I could easily get the Zeiss F4, but I heard it's dog shit and the Tamron isn't wide enough...not to mention I shoot indoor events so that also puts the F4's out of the running.Still thinking about the 24mm GM. Looks like such an awesome lens.
Did anyone pick one up? Looks like it's still sold out, good for my wallet....
I'm sitting here doing my best to not preorder a 135GM, I'm deciding between that and a 24-70GM. I could easily get the Zeiss F4, but I heard it's dog shit and the Tamron isn't wide enough...not to mention I shoot indoor events so that also puts the F4's out of the running.
I read enough of that already LOL. If it wasn't for the fact that I might have to move soon I'd have preordered it already, I still might, shit. I kind of want to wait till I get my unused vacation time check and go to town.This won't help at all but here you go: https://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/1588217/0#14793250
I read enough of that already LOL. If it wasn't for the fact that I might have to move soon I'd have preordered it already, I still might, shit. I kind of want to wait till I get my unused vacation time check and go to town.
It's why I want it. I already know I'd use it since it would be better for low light for when my 70-200GM can't handle it. It's really just bad timing. I think I can get it knocked down to 1600 with some trade ins, but that's money I might be needing to move into another apartment so it's a matter of prioritizing. Choices are getting a lens or risk being homeless.But why wouldn't you want to own almost the best lens ever designed, with a focal length hardly anybody really needs with that aperture?
Probably never happening in your life time.
400mm at f/5.6 at MFD is a gigantic macro lens. 200 at .95 would be stupid unusable.
"What's in focus?"400mm at f/5.6 at MFD is a gigantic macro lens. 200 at .95 would be stupid unusable.
You say that like I wasn't going to read that. Nice results, I don't shoot from the hip like that though.
You say that like I wasn't going to read that. Nice results, I don't shoot from the hip like that though.
There's no doubt that AF would help a lot though. I almost missed a shot or two because the Fuji 56 1.2 hunts around a bit.Yeah, you already get great results with what you're doing, but figured I'd share anyway :).
Well ideally you have a waist level view finder of some sort -- common on medium format box cameras, and imitatable on MILC's with a tilting screen.I've never understood the concept of shooting from the hip street photography. Isn't it literally spray and pray with no sense of what you're actually capturing?
I still don't quite get it...is the point to be discrete? Good fucking luck seeing a tilted LCD in broad daylight around here.Well ideally you have a waist level view finder of some sort -- common on medium format box cameras, and imitatable on MILC's with a tilting screen.
It does take practice though, mainly from the disconnect of having the screen facing up at you at a different angle than the lens is actually capturing, but it's not difficult.
It's to be inconspicuous. I do my best to just use common sense with where I actually do it and how. I also don't shoot at F8 (depends on the shot) so I better damn well know what I'm focusing on.I still don't quite get it...is the point to be discrete? Good fucking luck seeing a tilted LCD in broad daylight around here.
I've only done it once or twice, but never had any issues with it. It sort of requires, or at least heavily encourages, a neck strap vs shoulder strap.I still don't quite get it...is the point to be discrete? Good fucking luck seeing a tilted LCD in broad daylight around here.
Yeah and that's why his photos aren't much to look at, nothing interesting is happening (except for the girl smiling at her reflection, that's the best of the bunch), those would've been much better had he taken them properly. Shooting from the hip is when you don't have the time or you don't want to disturb the scene. All good street photographers should set exposure and pre-focus a predicted distance anyway though.I've never understood the concept of shooting from the hip street photography. Isn't it literally spray and pray with no sense of what you're actually capturing?
Nah. There's some people that excel at it. People like Keizo Kitajima were master of shooting the hip.I've never understood the concept of shooting from the hip street photography. Isn't it literally spray and pray with no sense of what you're actually capturing?
Enjoy it and get some of the good primes if you want.I just ordered the Fuji X-T3 with the 18-55 lens. First real camera. Pretty excited to get into photography. I had an internship at a tv production agency a few months ago and I just loved to work with the equipment. They filmed mostly on a Sony FS-7 and a 5D Mark IV and I loved the few times I got to actually work with them. Both video work and some photography when I had the time. I'm really excited to finally have a camera that I can just take with me. I've watched so many videos about equipment and photography, I've read a short book on the history of photography and one on beginner photography, played around in Lightroom and Capture One with some sample images and now I finally had the money saved up to make the jump. Really excited for it to arrive. Just felt like sharing.
I hope that's not a long wait to be honest. I want a fourth gen something so the third gen can get cheaper. I think I'm skilled enough to get by on an A7RIII lol
Keep waiting and I'm not the demographic for that camera series. I don't do enough video to warrant the mark up for that thing. The A7RII and my X-T3 are more than enough for what I do.
The basic expectation is for things like 4K/60, 10-bit 4:2:2, and a lot of manufacturers are doing that right now, but I want to think in a different way and create something that goes beyond the expectations of our customers. It's easy to add 4K/60, but beyond these specs, a lot of customers have other kinds of demands, and that's what we're researching.
I look at cameras at stills first video second. I'd never do something that could potentially be printed for work using something like an A7SIIVideo yeah, but also probably the best one for low light which is why I was interested in it to begin with. But the RX1X is more my style, I'm waiting on that front as a second body.
Still thinking about the 24mm GM. Looks like such an awesome lens.
Did anyone pick one up? Looks like it's still sold out, good for my wallet....
I really need to preorder the 135 don't I?It's my most favorite lens so far. Its on my camera 90% of the time.
But yeah, I've read its hard to get.
Believe it or not but I use that length for a lot of street photography on Fuji. Would also be a really good low light event photography lens. It would definitely be used.Buy first, regret later.
Depends of course if you shoot enough of that focal length to justify the cost. And it looks like it'll be the best 135mm so far.
Congrats, it's a joy to use, possibly the best/fastest APS-C body out there depending on use case. What tips are you looking for? Make sure to use a moderately fast card (Sandisk Extreme Pro for example) to hit it's potential. Judiciously use the Q menu and get used to changing parameters there on the fly. Setup the screen swipe controls and button/dials to setup the functions you would be using most frequently. Get used to the drive modes. Setup the EVF/screen displays to your liking (I like to use the distance scale and get digital as well as analog readouts and the histogram for light metering.Just purchased this guy - New Fuji user coming from Canon.
Any tips from X series owners?
Film sim JPEGS are great, but most of them will blow your highlights out to an unrecoverable level unless you expose for that in cam, so I'd suggest still using RAW.
Congrats, it's a joy to use, possibly the best/fastest APS-C body out there depending on use case. What tips are you looking for? Make sure to use a moderately fast card (Sandisk Extreme Pro for example) to hit it's potential. Judiciously use the Q menu and get used to changing parameters there on the fly. Setup the screen swipe controls and button/dials to setup the functions you would be using most frequently. Get used to the drive modes. Setup the EVF/screen displays to your liking (I like to use the distance scale and get digital as well as analog readouts and the histogram for light metering.
What do you shoot? I can suggest a couple of primes, but they might not be to your tastes. Regarding film sims I use classic chrome a lot and at times Provia, it really depends on the look you're going for and how it suits your editing style. I also personally just keep the touch screen off. I also mostly have the EVF set to EVF only and only switch that if I need the LCD for a shot, but my suggestions probably make no sense to other people on here.Great thanks for the tips! Little overwhelming diving into the Fuji system from Canon but really enjoying the camera so far!
Any recommendations on the Film Simulation modes? I usually just shoot RAW on Canon but I'm intrigued...
For lenses I'm just starting out with the 18-55mm but looking to pick up a prime soon - any suggestions for a nice compliment to the kit lens?
What do you shoot? I can suggest a couple of primes, but they might not be to your tastes. Regarding film sims I use classic chrome a lot and at times Provia, it really depends on the look you're going for and how it suits your editing style. I also personally just keep the touch screen off. I also mostly have the EVF set to EVF only and only switch that if I need the LCD for a shot, but my suggestions probably make no sense to other people on here.
Any of the "Fujicrons" are good lenses -- that is to say, the F2 weather resistant primes. There's a 35mm f2, 23mm f2, and a 50mm f2. After you get a feel for the focal length you like the most on your kit lens, get the prime that gets closest to that.Great thanks for the tips! Little overwhelming diving into the Fuji system from Canon but really enjoying the camera so far!
Any recommendations on the Film Simulation modes? I usually just shoot RAW on Canon but I'm intrigued...
For lenses I'm just starting out with the 18-55mm but looking to pick up a prime soon - any suggestions for a nice compliment to the kit lens?