RSSmith wrote:
Click the arrow icon at the lower right of your image and select BBCODE.
Choose the size you want to post and copy the link, then past it in your post.
Ron
Thank you Ron.
What is BBCODE?
Which arrow, the one posting to the right, or the one pointing down?
Under the photo, the one that arcs to the right, not the one pointing down. That brings up the share modal. "BBCODE" is the one that FM accepts. I always thought it stood for Bulletin Board Code, but I'm probably wrong. Anyway, copy the markup and paste it here. Just put a carriage return after the first close URL tag and it will format correctly. this isn't required, but it looks nicer.
-Tim
k-h.a.w wrote:
Thank you Ron.
What is BBCODE?
Which arrow, the one posting to the right, or the one pointing down?
tsdevine wrote:
Under the photo, the one that arcs to the right, not the one pointing down. That brings up the share modal. "BBCODE" is the one that FM accepts. I always thought it stood for Bulletin Board Code, but I'm probably wrong. Anyway, copy the markup and paste it here. Just put a carriage return after the first close URL tag and it will format correctly. this isn't required, but it looks nicer.
-Tim
Thank you Tim, much appreciated.
I'll try various things.
saaketham wrote:
Sony 200-600mm and Nikon z 105mm f/2.8 VR S 1:1 micro
🦅
I'm seriously considering selling my 100-400GM to fund the purchase of the 200-600. Everything I've read or seen about it suggests Sony could have easily branded it GM glass, same as with the 20G. My only concern is whether the issues with the A7RIV have been resolved.
The Sony 200-600 is (to me), the most versatile of all the ones I tried, with excellent IQ to boot. It even takes a 1.4x TC decently, to get you to 840mm. Getting decent background blur requires some planning and crawling around the ground due to f/5.6-6.3, and it is not very useful in low light. But, the weight and portability is midway between the huge/heavy Sigma 500 and the tiny/light Nikon 500 and works just right for me. Even with an a6600, the 200-600 worked quite well. Not sure if the issues with A7RIV are still around though.
I think if you're a landscape photographer get the 200-600 for your A7r4. It seems the issues are with the focusing hit rate and tracking fast movement. Swap to manual and use focus peaking to get the sharp image which I'll bet it's something you're already doing for landscapes.