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#6400 ISO
photoncatcher · 6 months
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Nikon D300s; 1/50; F/2.8; ISO 6400; 17mm
20/10/2023
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mreinberg · 11 months
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Elephants From Neptune live at Paavli Kultuurivabrik Opening Festival. Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mark IV.
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inefekt · 8 months
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Crux & Carina rising above the Stirling Ranges, Western Australia
Nikon d810a - 50mm - ISO 6400 - f/2.5 Foreground: 5 x 30 seconds Sky: 31 x 30 seconds iOptron SkyTracker Hoya Red Intensifier filter
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lzacc121 · 1 year
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libraford · 3 months
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Me, to coworker: ok, while the students are on lunch, we can each take half the school and get candids. I'll take the upstairs and you can take the downstairs. Do you have any questions about candids before I let you to it?
Coworker: nope! I understand candids, I don't need any help.
Part ways.
Coworker, comes and finds me: I need help.
Me: what's up?
Coworker: all my photos are dark. I turned all tge settings all the way up and it's still dark!
Me: lemme see it.
Settings: ISO- 6400, aperature- 18, shutter speed 1/8000
Me: ok, I'm going to start by explaining that the shutter speed is measured in fractions.
Coworker: ?
Me: you were shooting at 8000 frames per second.
Coworker: ?
Me: 1/8000 is actually the smallest number. Because it's a fraction. Your camera was seeing very little light at all. -puts it on 1/100- see, now it's not as dark. But you can also lower your aperature to 4.0 and let more light in.
Coworker: ?
Me: ok, stop thinking of the settings as 'higher' and 'lower.' The only setting that does 'high and low' is the ISO. Try thinking of your shutter speed as 'faster' and 'slower.' Slower lets light hit the sensor. Faster makes it barely hit the sensor at all. You'll hear the difference when you hit tge button because it will sound like your camera is lagging if the shutter is slow.
Aperature is 'wide' versus 'narrow.' A wide aperature is 4.0, it let's more light in. A narrow aperature let's less light in.
Wide, slow, and high lights the night sky.
Narrow, fast, and low blocks out the glow.
Ya feel me?
Coworker: ... I... guess... so? They didn't teach us any of that.
Me: ...I recall teaching this to everyone in October...
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jarredspec · 3 months
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Probably one of my last Milkyway shots in the North Island of New Zealand for a while.
📷: Fujifilm GFX100S & Rokinon 24mm f/1.4 via Fringer adaptor. 13”, f/2.5, ISO 6400
Go read on the Blog :)
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mutant-distraction · 7 months
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Nikhil Shahi
Comet NEOWISE over the badlands of GSENM
Southern Utah. Nikon D850, Nikon 70-200,ISO
6400, 5 seconds
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cctrain0722 · 2 months
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今年の冬を振り返る ~糠平湖・タウシュベツ編~
私にとって冬の一大イベント!糠平湖探索。 今年も許可を取り、ファットバイクでじっくり湖上ライドを楽しみました。
しかしながら今年は水位が上がりきらず、2月入る前にシーズン終了…切なさを感じながらも、約1年ぶりに対面する橋はもうボロボロ。
橋がすべて湖に沈みきらなかったためか、橋脚上に湖氷はなし。 その重みによる崩壊がなかったとは思いましたが、橋の下には崩れた礫が散乱していました。
また来年会う時には、この綺麗なアーチが無くなっているかもしれない…しかしそれも自然に還る姿。
今ある景色。目に焼き付けました。
一枚目【焦点距離】85mm【ISO】64【SS】1/1250【F値】/5.6 二段目左【焦点距離】60mm【ISO】125【SS】1/250【F値】/8 二段目右【焦点距離】40mm【ISO】64【SS】1/2000【F値】/2.8 四枚目【焦点距離】24mm【ISO】64【SS】1/4000【F値】/2.8 四段目左【焦点距離】40mm【ISO】125【SS】1/2500【F値】/5.6 四段目右【焦点距離】85mm【ISO】64【SS】1/6400【F値】/2.8 七枚目【焦点距離】24mm【ISO】64【SS】1/4000【F値】/2.8 八枚目【焦点距離】85mm【ISO】64【SS】1/1000【F値】/8
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pix4japan · 7 months
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Crimson and Green
Most of the trees in Kinchakuda Manjushage Park (Saitama Prefecture, Japan) stand upright offering visitors to the park a lovely canopy of shade when viewing the red spider lilies.
In this shot, however, I focused on an old tree in the middle of the lilies that was growing at an angle. I love how the tree emerges from the field of lilies and is winding its way upwards towards the sunlight. I also love how the green moss stands in stark contrast with the crimson lilies.
Pentax K-1 II + D FA 28-105mm F3.5-5.6 105 mm ISO 6400 for 1/250 sec. at ƒ/10
Access details and further reading in Japanese and English available here to help you plan your adventure to this park (https://www.pix4japan.com/blog/20220927-red-spider-lilies).
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photosofsouthwestmt · 7 months
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Pronghorn
A pronghorn buck I found the other day. The rut is in full swing, and the bigger bucks are less spooky.
Nikon D500, Manual Mode, Tamron 150-600mm VC G2, F/6.3, ISO 500, ET 1/6400, Focal Length 600mm, Handheld, Vibration Control on
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mreinberg · 1 year
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Dead Quiet at Wise Hall, back in November. Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mark IV.
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livefromphilly · 1 year
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Sony RX100 VII Thoughts After Two Months
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PROS:
Stacked sensors are the future. Well, technically the present considering that Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fuji, and OM Systems all use stacked sensors in their top of the line cameras. Either way, finally getting to experience shooting with one on a daily basis has made me want one in pretty much any camera going forward. The benefits are twofold: Not only do you get shutter speeds up to 20 frames per second, and without a mechanical shutter flipping in the way obscuring your view in between shots, but you also get no rolling shutter while doing it. Pretty much every Sony camera can shoot 10 fps bursts with the silent shutter, but any movement can give you a jello-like effect since the sensor reads out so slow on non-stacked cameras. The only con, at least on this camera, is that you can’t shoot flash at higher than 1/100 with the electronic shutter. That’s still plenty fast for a lot of stuff, but well below the 1/2000 you get when shooting the mechanical shutter. 
The fast frame rate wouldn’t make much of a difference if the camera was bad at autofocusing, but this camera is great at it. It has a lot of the same fancy focusing stuff that my full frame Sony has like human/animal eye autofocus and all the tracking modes I’m used to. It actually makes the camera pretty solid for wildlife if you can get close enough at the 200mm end. 
Speaking of that, the 24-200mm equivalent is a great range, and one that I missed a lot since I traded away my Tamron 28-200 to help cover the cost of my A7RIV. The small size and extra 4mm on the wide end actually makes it even more convenient than that Tamron. 
Aside from covering a broader range than the 24-70 equivalent lens from the older RX100 cameras, this lens also seems noticeably sharper. The last RX100 model I had, the Mk. IV, just didn’t seem as crispy as this lens is. 
It has a touchscreen! It’s wild to think that the previous RX100 cameras I owned didn’t have this basic ass feature, but Sony was very late in putting touch screens in their cameras. Ironically, I don’t really use it in this one because the AF is good enough that I can just do focus and recompose with tracking. 
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CONS:
It’s still only a 1” style sensor so high ISO isn’t the cameras strong suit. Programs like DXO PureRAW help a lot and let you get somewhat usable images at ISO 6400 in a pinch, but you’re kinda pushing things at that point. 
While the lens is sharper and covers a wider range than the older models, it’s also significantly slower. At 24mm equivalent it’s already at f/2.8 where the old cameras were f/1.8. It’s f/3.2 at 25mm, f/3.5 at 33mm, and f/4 at 40mm. From 109mm to 200mm you’re at f/4.5. The relative slowness of the lens combined with the small sensor means that this can struggle getting quality images in low light without a tripod or something. 
No USB-C. My Fuji, Ricoh, and larger Sony all have USB-C charging, which is amazingly convenient when traveling. I haven’t really gone anywhere with this camera yet, but having to account for a micro USB cable is annoying since pretty much everything aside from my iPhone uses USB-C. 
It’s expensive. Just like my Mk III and Mk IV I got it used so it was cheaper than retail, but the copy I got cost about twice what I paid for the previous models. 
Start up time is just a tad bit slower than I’d like. The GRIII and X100V both beat it that regards, albeit those aren’t zoom lens so I have to cut the Sony some slack. 
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SAMPLE PHOTOS: 
(The sample photos were edited in Lightroom Classic and DXO PureRAW2. Also, the sensor creates a roughly 2.7x crop factor, so the 9-72mm lens equates to 24-200ish)
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Young Bird | ISO 160. 72mm. f/4.5. 1/200. 
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Graffiti Shot from a Car | ISO 100. 33.98mm. f/4. 1/400.
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Stickers | ISO 100. 29.67mm. f/4.5. 1/100.
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City Hall | ISO 100. 38.13mm. f/4.5. 1/200. 
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Flip Up Screen Selfie with My Friend Hanae | ISO 3200. 9mm. f/2.8. 1/40. 
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Zoomed in Graffiti | ISO 640. 72mm. f/4.5. 1/500. 
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Fishing Store Neon | ISO 800. 28.67mm. f/8. 1/200. 
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Flowers | ISO 200. 72mm. f/5. 1/640.
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Selfie Shots with My Sister | ISO 3200. 9mm. f/2.8. 1/100. 
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inefekt · 11 months
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Milky Way at York, Western Australia
Nikon d810a - 50mm - ISO 6400 - f/2.5 - Foreground: 7 x 30 seconds - Sky: 35 x 30 seconds - iOptron SkyTracker - Hoya Red Intensifier filter
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lzacc121 · 1 year
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dragons-in-spaceee · 1 year
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Absolutely spectacular skies last night - could just about see the Milky Way band with my naked eye and there were SO MANY STARS!!!! Also, for a surprise extra bonus, my camera picked up some red auroras on the horizon!!
I’ll reblog with an annotated version of these later (as in pointing out clusters and stuff :) )
15 second exposure, iso 6400, 27mm lens
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cthmsn.photo New shows this weekend… counting down the days 🗓️ Here’s @.anthonygreen666 of @lsdunes last year in Orlando Shot on Canon R6 RF 24-70mm 2.8 f2.8 | ISO 6400 | 1/640s
posted january 18, 2024
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