Re: What am I doing wrong
Personally I would use manual focus with so many branches to shoot through. I would guess you camera is hunting to focus on the bird.
Hand held or tri-pod? With such a low shutter speed at 600mm I would definitely use a tri or mono pod! My 2 cents!
Re: What am I doing wrong
Hand held ........ The tree is in my front yard, I have to run upstairs to a bedroom and open a window without scaring them away so there really is no time to set up a tripod, next time I will try a monopod.The tele converter kills me on the appeture I usually shoot at 5.6 but I can't with the TC. I guess it will take patience and some practice.
Re: What am I doing wrong
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mahopac
The tele converter kills me on the appeture I usually shoot at 5.6 but I can't with the TC. I guess it will take patience and some practice.
I'm guessing the TC is also killing you on sharpness. 2X TC's are best used on high quality prime lenses. Put a TC on an inexpensive consumer lens, and they really degrade the quality of the image. I have an inexpensive TC that I almost never use. The loss of image quality just isn't worth it. You may be better off shooting at 300mm, and then cropping your image in post.
Re: What am I doing wrong
Thanks, I have to get out of the I have to get the ultimate close up,
Re: What am I doing wrong
That teleconverter will work better on your 50-200...
The shot looks like it suffers from a bit of shake and a bit of lens softness. Try stopping down to f/7.1 with the 70-300. The 50-200 should be pretty sharp even wide open. Some kind of bracing - maybe just proning yourself on the windowsill - will help stabilize it!
Re: What am I doing wrong
I think the comments you've gotten so far are right on. Using a TC on a consumer lens typically degrades the IQ by quite a bit. The suggestion of using manual focus through the branches is also excellent. One alternative may be to choose a single focusing point, and place that directly on the bird's eye.
One other point that I didn't see mentioned here is light angle. Your bird is clearly side/back lit here, creating a burned out area on the bird, and poor metering from the camera. Whenerver possible, you want the light behind you so that your shadow points toward the subject. This, of course, is a "general" guideline, as there are always some circumstances in which you may be intentionally going for a sidelit or backlit effect. I spend most of my time working my way "uplight" from my subjects.
Re: What am I doing wrong
Re: What am I doing wrong
Great answers here and I'll add my vote to the TC being the major cause of softness. I have a cheap one and quit using it after seeing all the images I took with it were very soft.
Re: What am I doing wrong
TC and slow shutter speed. 600mm 1/160sec? Should have used tripod, I would say.