yes, polarized. Tamron 17-50 f/2.8
3/12/2008 5:02:56 PM
did u take multiple shots and stitch them together?
3/12/2008 5:10:00 PM
Yes, that's 7 or 8 shots stitched with the canon software.
3/14/2008 5:31:48 PM
Bump
3/15/2008 11:44:11 PM
^^ it's a nice shot. Did you play with the levels any? looks like the contrast was bumped some.
3/15/2008 11:55:48 PM
And this is why I love my 1D mkIIn + 300 f/2.8 IS.
3/20/2008 12:25:40 PM
Stereotypical baseball shot:Tall, fat umpire: check.Short guy from the team: check.Yelling over something retarded: check.
3/20/2008 1:04:50 PM
3/20/2008 5:22:53 PM
what OOF? And the pic is of the head coach, before he was ejected off the field.[Edited on March 20, 2008 at 5:37 PM. Reason : ]
3/20/2008 5:35:58 PM
ok - so i'm sure this has been asked and answered several times in this thread....but its 53 pages long....so what do you guys suggest for someone who is just starting and not ready to buy an SLR? Like a starter camera. Willing to spend up to probably $300Go!
3/20/2008 6:20:07 PM
I bought the Canon S3IS as my first digital camera. I STILL love it, and it use (I just got it back from my mom...her christmas present from a bunch of us was the S5)Fujifilm makes good ones too (hopefully, miska and quagmire02 will post their experiences with theirs).
3/20/2008 6:24:46 PM
When I bought my first DSLR I was strongly considering a Canon S2IS. Since I was leaning toward SLR I instead went with a Pentax DS and loved it. Point of relevance: if you think you'll eventually want an SLR, you might as well get one and take your time learning it. Many of the beginner models across all the major brands are quite good and include "made for dummies" type features, in case you don't want to get overwhelmed with the technical aspects.
3/20/2008 8:32:29 PM
300 + 2x + 1.4x stacked.
3/21/2008 2:52:34 AM
thanks for your advise ambrosia1231 and PatTimei definitely hear what your saying PatTime and it makes a lot of sense. also i was looking around and the Savannah College of Art and Design does 8-week classes for $300 at their Atlanta campus, which seems like a good deal....right?
3/21/2008 10:33:16 AM
3/21/2008 11:31:10 AM
I really found a liking to my Canon Nifty Fifty 50mm 1,8 fixed lens. I think I like it because of the speed, clarity, and the biggest draw is the price.I think I spent $50 for it and it was well worth the price. I like it more than my 3.5 IS 75-200mm. However I am thinking of upgrading to a faster zoom lens. Are there any other glass that anyone would recommend that would be equal in comparison and price?
3/24/2008 9:21:30 AM
what are you looking to do or shoot? The nifty 50 is probably the best low light valued lens in canon's line up. The 85 1.8 USM is a good value, but it's like 300 or so. The 35 f/2 is a decent glass for the price too, but I think that's 200.
3/24/2008 9:29:02 AM
In terms of point and shoot with a good length lens, I have heard great things about the Canon SX100IS, and am about to buy one myself.Street price $299 but most places have cut it down to $250 now.
3/24/2008 9:35:35 AM
^ i've also heard really good things about that one...my only concern is the glassi've not used that particular model (and it's not like canons have a reputation for poor picture quality - exactly the opposite, really), but in my experience, the quality of the glass (as i mentioned before, i prefer leica or zeiss) makes a noticeable difference at full optical zoom and in VERY close shots...so noticeable (IMO), that it's a deal-breaker for methat said, i guess it depends on what sort of shots you're taking, and how large you like your pictures - i actually print mine out (8x10, mostly) on professional equipment, but at that size and larger (i can get about 11x14 if i'm REALLY lucky), the difference is there and simply not acceptable
3/24/2008 10:07:11 AM
I bought my parents the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ3 for Christmas and would recommend it to anyone. I got it at HH Gregg for $224 (most places are now charging around $279). I looked at many others like the Canon S5 and the features didn't compare to the TZ3.The selling features for me:-One of the best lenses on the market for a point and shoot - Leica glass-Advertised as 10x optical zoom, but it doesn't make a huge sacrifice on the wide angle side like some others. The effective range is 28-280mm. The Canon SX100 is 36-360mm which might get a little closer but won't capture as wide of an angle scene.-Image stabilization (good for old people with shaky hands). I tested the camera in the store by shaking it while I took pictures and they were clear.-It is advertises as a 7.2 megapixel but the sensor is actually an 8.5. This is useful if you take pictures in different formats (16:9...).[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 10:15 AM. Reason : .][Edited on March 24, 2008 at 10:16 AM. Reason : ..]
3/24/2008 10:11:52 AM
3/24/2008 10:24:36 AM
The canon L lens are nice, but expensive. The good thing about them is that they hold their value. You can buy a 70-200 f/4 non-IS lens today for about $500-550 used, use it for a few months and resell it for about the same price. You find this among most L lens, even if they are old as shit. Sigma makes some nice lens too, but their value doesn't hold up as strong as Canon's, but their telephoto's are strong performers for a good bit less of money, specially if you buy an already used one. I've seen 70-200 versions of sigma f/2.8 for about the 600-700 range with little use. IS only helps with camera shake, so if you have enough light, you shouldn't need it. It helps with panning shots though, but it also adds $600 to any lens (the good IS with dual modes).I would say a 70-200 f/2.8L non-IS would be a keeper lens, but if you never owned an L lens before, get the f/4 version. It's cheaper and light weight compared to other telephotos in it's class. It's also the best bang for the buck L lens on the market. The other one is the 17-40 wide angle zoom, but I disliked mine because of poor image quality.
3/24/2008 11:03:28 AM
3/24/2008 11:35:00 AM
^ i rely on ken rockwell pages to explain certain things to certain people, too he does a great job of explaining points that i get frustrated with, though i DO disagree with some of his blanket statementsfor example,
3/24/2008 12:33:38 PM
Ken Rockwell ftmfw.
3/24/2008 12:34:45 PM
having good equipment gives the photograph more creative control, but when you compre slr's to other slr's, you are dealing with minor details. Glass is important, but you can get away with a cheap lens than a premium lens. I say this because that 17-40 I had, man those images were soft as hell even stopped down from f/4 to f/8 and images were just totally unusable. People kept saying to mount it on a tripod and it was "user error" for the blurred or soft images. Shit, I was taking landscape pictures in bright day light at ISO 100 f/8 and at 1/250 shutter speed at 17mm, camera shake should not be an issue. The kit lens gave sharper images.Also, the 1.3x crop factor sensor I have now with the new camera, makes my 24-70 seem like a whole new lens and enjoying the wider viewing angle. Can't wait till I can afford a 16-35.The one thing that nocks my socks off with photog's is the amount of people who claim to be a pro. Let me start of saying that I do not claim myself to be a pro. Even though I get paid for photo service and have my own business, I like to see myself as an aspiring photographer just because I'm learning the ropes in all generes. It's just a hobby and I have fun at it. Any money I make from it, goes back into the hobby.
3/24/2008 1:23:24 PM
I agree that sometime the blanket statements might be a bit much. There are a few times when yes, the camera matters.Point and counterpoint:My parents, several years ago, bought me an HP733 digital camera as a last minute Christmas Eve "holy crap we don't know what he wants so we'll get him a random digicam" present. It was, in a word...crap. It takes FOREVER to focus and there's essentially no manual controls. I can occasionally coax out a good macro image, but that's it. Taking multiple seconds to focus means the shot could be lost, and since the image quality from that thing was grainy anyway...Another example:Underwater photography -- you can take some fantastic shots with a dSLR if you know what you're doing (plus plenty of crap shots, too). You can also take some great shots with a point and shoot. But...I've used a "SeaLife DC500" underwater camera before. It's a point and shoot in a housing, and it's terrible -- image quality is way below average, no manual controls -- just a bunch of built-in settings. Battery life is god-awful (especially with the flash). Like the HP camera I mentioned, this camera also takes forever to focus and half the time it isn't correct, so the shot is usually gone. The flash is usually too powerful and overexposes everything if the object is close.Hmm....there's a main idea in there somewhere. I can get halfway decent shots out of both those cameras, but I get a higher percentage of good shots from higher-quality cameras. I suppose Ken Rockwell does have a good point, in that the camera's job is to get out of your way and let you take the images you want. Both those cameras I mentioned are annoying and frustrating to use.[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 5:32 PM. Reason : ]
3/24/2008 5:30:48 PM
all these SLR-like point-n-shoots are just that....point-n-shoots, they don't belong in an SLR thread. If you've got a $300 budget, grow your budget by another $100 and get a used DSLR on ebay. I picked up my 2nd Canon 10D body for $300 last fall. Then just get yourself a lens and enjoy some real photography.
3/24/2008 5:43:00 PM
3/24/2008 9:18:24 PM
http://photo.net/photodb/presentation?presentation_id=317651Photos made with a Canon A620 p&s.
3/24/2008 9:59:48 PM
that's damn impressive
3/24/2008 11:22:35 PM
^^ Someone beat that guy with an HDR stick.
3/24/2008 11:32:30 PM
this is Rajiv...one of the fish in our tank at workme playing around with my R2 filterthat homeless lady on hboro that always ask for changewhats up dogwater on my windshieldjunk bin at the flea market...notice the kids eating watermelonmore flea market junktook this the other day leaving the office]
3/25/2008 11:13:57 AM
I've been doing a lot of reading and research when deciding what telephoto lens to get before my trip to AK this fall. I don't have an unlimited budget and I want something that will be comfortable to carry around. So with that I think I have landed on the 70-200L F/4. The price seems right and I've read nothing but good things about them. Even from people that went with the 2.8 said that the 4 was still a great deal and easier to carry. I'm also thinking of getting a teleconverter to gain a little bit more reach. I have had a tougher time deciding on the 50, while the 1.8 is waaaay affordable the 1.4 seems like a better lens due to construction and the autofocus motor being USM. But the price seems a little more prohibitive.comments?
3/25/2008 12:33:58 PM
Quag- Yep. That last post was meant to sound elitist... but only to the extent that DSLRs are superior to P&S cameras. You can get great images with both types if you know what you're doing, and you can also get crap with both if you don't. DSLRs just can't be touched when it comes to speed, versatility, and responsiveness, which IMO makes them much better to learn on. You can grow your camera system as you grow as a photographer. I don't shoot still-life photos, I shoot people...portraits, sports, weddings, events, etc. For me, the delay in focus and shutter response is so bad even on the most versatile macro-18x-manual-options-bells-and-whistles-DSLR-like P&S camera that I couldn't imagine using one to capture life as it happens. I could probably use one for still-lifes, landscapes, travel...but not for the type of photography i do. Go back and read my last post again, I wasn't suggesting that someone drop, as you suggest, "a grand", or 10+ grand in the case of JBaz, I was suggesting spending around $400 for a basic DSLR and lens to learn on. Im right there with ya on the point about, "it's not the camera, it's the photographer." Some of the photographers I admire and look up to use entry-level DSLRs, ala Digi Rebels and Sony Alphas.
3/25/2008 12:41:00 PM
^^The 70-200 f/4L is definitely a great lens. I'd recommend either that lens or a Sigma 70-200 f/2.8. I used to shoot with the latter and it was an amazing lens, but you'd have to consider that it is a lot heavier than the f/4L. I've owned both the 50 1.8 and 1.4. Go with the 1.8 since it fits your budget right now. It's a Canon lens so you can always sell it later on for a little less than what you paid for it and upgrade to the 1.4 like I eventually did. Either lens is a good option.[Edited on March 25, 2008 at 12:49 PM. Reason : ^^]
3/25/2008 12:48:41 PM
3/25/2008 12:57:24 PM
I think you greatly understate the value of what can be shot with a standard range zoom lens. But I do see what your sayin, so let me revise my recommendation a little bit. If someone doesn't know jack about photography but might want to get into it and dabble in nature photography, macro photography, and all-around-picture taking, they can get a top-of-the-line P&S. But if someone wants to shoot people at all...their kids playing soccer, people portraits, anything in the journalistic style, there is no substitute for an SLR. I'm not recommending professional equipment, just basic SLR equipment to learn on. Used is fine, that's how I got my start. Lets just agree to disagree. [Edited on March 25, 2008 at 1:32 PM. Reason : ]
3/25/2008 1:31:00 PM
A guy I know out in California takes some pretty amazing shots underwater with his D200.You can see a gallery here...http://www.divematrix.com/gallery/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/3/sl/mA few examples: (I hope he doesn't mind me linking)Wide angle shot on ascent near a kelp forest...Macro shot of a nudibranch (sea slug)...I love these macro shots of nudibranches...
3/25/2008 1:38:08 PM
54
3/25/2008 1:38:30 PM
the underwater shots are awesome
3/25/2008 1:40:00 PM
Yeah, they're pretty incredible.
3/25/2008 1:59:47 PM
im jealous
3/25/2008 2:01:08 PM
The camera rig for those shots is huge. The arms for the strobes stretch out to ~6ft wide if i remember correctly. Thankfully they're retractable for easy handling when you're not shooting. Shooting underwater on scuba takes a lot more skill than above water, especially if you're doing macro work on something the size of a grain of rice. If nothing else, the simple fact that natural light is absorbed by the water makes it difficult to get shots with any red in them unless you're shallow, or you have a good set of strobes. The deeper you go, the more colors are absorbed in the order of the rainbow -- ROYGBIV. Thus, strobes are necessary to create photos like the ones above.This is the housing + arms and strobes. Note that the D200 is not inside in these photos.[Edited on March 25, 2008 at 2:11 PM. Reason : ]
3/25/2008 2:10:35 PM
It has probably been mentioned before in this thread but since I am lazy perhaps someone could give me a quick answer. I am buying my first DSLR, a Canon 400D, and I have heard from somewhere that the kit lens is a piece of shit. Can anyone suggest a better starter, general purpose lens?
3/25/2008 4:06:42 PM
Tamron Di 18-250mm is a fantastic all purpose lens.
3/25/2008 4:09:21 PM
The Canon EF-S 17-85/4-5.6 IS USM I currently have it on mine. Also the Canon's EF 28-135 3.5-5.6 IS USM is a good multipurpose lens. From what I have been reading the 50 F/1.8 II is a great lens for a fantastic price, sub $100.
3/25/2008 5:06:48 PM
I was able to upgrade to SLR with a XTI from Dell for $305 on a price mistake. I'll be joining the thread now.
3/25/2008 9:07:17 PM
How did you manage that?
3/25/2008 9:25:19 PM
That was on Slickdeals. I almost bought an extra XTi body but will likely get the new XSi instead when the price drops a little.http://forums.slickdeals.net/showthread.php?sduid=349975&t=775401I have seen a few places selling the XTi kit for under $500 the the body for under $350. I'm guessing they're getting rid of XTI's because the new XSi is out with improved features. The XSi has:-12.2 MP-uses SD/SDHC instead of CF-live view 3" LCDThe XSi kit also comes with the new 18-55 IS, which is an improvement over the old XTi 18-55.[Edited on March 26, 2008 at 8:05 AM. Reason : of]
3/26/2008 7:51:52 AM