Your photograph made me stop. I took my hand off the mouse, and just sat there looking, enjoying the beauty of this scene and the talent behind the lens that produced this photograph. So wonderful!
First real trip out with the R5. It was only a long half day. I was focused on landscape, but this doe got a few clicks. I just purchased the Fidelity Profiles. Each photo is different with all six presets represented. In order, Faithful, Fine Detail, Landscape, Neutral, Portrait, and Standard. No processing other than setting the white balance to Daylight and a slight crop.
Finally took a short video of some turkeys in 8K. The footage is really pretty nice. I am impressed with the auto focus in video mode.
Would you be willing to click the box next to "show exif data" when you upload your photos so it will show which lens and body and the settings used for each shot? It helps me gauge how well the R5 is doing at different ISOs, lenses and settings. Thank you. AMAZING - AMAZING work. I admire you landscapers so much.
Thanks! I'm not using Fred's site to host these...they're served from my site, so the forum software won't read the EXIF and display it. That said, EXIF is intact on all of them, so if you get an EXIF plugin for your browser, it's as easy as right clicking. I use xIFr on Firefox and Exif Viewer Pro on Chrome. All of the shots from today are at ISO 100, tripod mounted. Generally shot between f/11 and f/16, depending on the depth of field needed.
pasblues wrote:
Would you be willing to click the box next to "show exif data" when you upload your photos so it will show which lens and body and the settings used for each shot? It helps me gauge how well the R5 is doing at different ISOs, lenses and settings. Thank you. AMAZING - AMAZING work. I admire you landscapers so much.
arbitrage wrote:
Had to zoom way back for this one
Nice shot!
I'm wondering if A1 worth the money compared to R5. So far BEAF & AEAF are similar between these two. How's tracking? I can get R5 and 100-500 for the price of A1
Your photograph made me stop. I took my hand off the mouse, and just sat there looking, enjoying the beauty of this scene and the talent behind the lens that produced this photograph. So wonderful!
Tom
armd wrote:
Mike that Snowy setting is so beautiful, it looks like she was trained and this was a set. No really it is a complement and a tremendous capture!
Thank you both. I certainly was very lucky to have it perch where it did. The area where this was taken is a very rural farming community known for its numerous birds of prey so I feel that this image represents that area very well.