I got an open box and traded the rest of my Sony gear in for it, so I got mine free f_a_98 wrote:
Pictures look good. Waiting for the XH2S to come on sale, and I may look at the same combo you have.
Already have the 500 and 1.4 TC.
Nice série Richard, you probably picked up the best shots but they looks pretty and the eye is well is focus. You’ve got already some bright vibrant colors, spring seems already well established where you live. Cheers
gregcpb wrote:
Nice série Richard, you probably picked up the best shots but they looks pretty and the eye is well is focus. You’ve got already some bright vibrant colors, spring seems already well established where you live. Cheers
Thank you Greg
We’re currently in autumn heading into winter. The colourful robins are starting to appear but I need to travel a couple of hours from home to see and try to photograph them. So far the Fuji setup should work okay, but I’ll also take my Nikon setup ( I’ve used previous seasons ) just to be on the safe side, particularly if the day is dark and overcast.
As we get closer to winter downunder I'm finding the X-H2S with 150-600mm lens AF is becoming less accurate. The keeper rate is dropping.
At a local bush reserve there was a family of Kookaburra's being quite active. I had opportunities to get plenty of photos. Unfortunately, not a lot of keepers.
Hi Molson, beautiful hummingbird shot here. Did you took it using some perch or bird feeder because I can’t imagine getting a shot like that in the wild with my XT3 ^^.
By the way I love the color contrast between the green background and purple bird, very pleasing. Cheers
Great snap!
From DPR discussions, it was slowly becoming obvious that subject detection should be kept off and it would improve bird AF tracking. Have you tried that?
Also, where do you put the XH2S compared to the other cameras you have tried. Would like to hear your perspective too.
molson wrote:
I guess I'm spoiled by all the other cameras I've used this year, but at least the results become more encouraging when the light gets a little better.
Seems like on the wallaby the camera focused on the leaves?
Richard_M wrote:
As we get closer to winter downunder I'm finding the X-H2S with 150-600mm lens AF is becoming less accurate. The keeper rate is dropping.
At a local bush reserve there was a family of Kookaburra's being quite active. I had opportunities to get plenty of photos. Unfortunately, not a lot of keepers.