Posts Tagged ‘Telephoto Lens’

[Nikon AF-S 70-300mm ED-IF VR] Sharp and slow

Recently I bought my first telephoto lens for my new (ish) Nikon D70, Nikkor lenses only confidence (literally can not afford not of good quality).

I tried a few times, architecture and portrait photography mostly.
As a “rookie” to photography, I thought it would be for my first telephoto lens to be within a reasonable budget, which is what I referred to the Haber-Guard had a Knallatevi around.
The goal is sehr well built and solid, heavy nuevolatively, but I doubt I would feel too much of a weight loss between lenses, a couple of grams eh? Until now, the sharpness of images produced when a tripod (without VR (Vibration Reduction) you’ll never in a position to a goal of 300 mm x 1.4 by hand without blurring the image, so I have horrible technique) .
The main interessatiquando I wahrscheinlichdies for the first time, the way was long, loud AF is often directly to the APPROACH a second on several occasions, even with a well-defined edge, which often focus needs to be done with manual focus, then click on the AF and leave it short, which is often the time to do it, but I see someone who should be knocking Athletics Odet photography?

In general, for the price, one or objectivity, but if you do not have time for MF, I recommend that you have a little more expensive lens. Good luck people.

The best camera for your Safari

So you’ve booked your life once in a safari trip in Africa and now your thoughts turn towards photographing all the wildlife you’ll encounter on your adventure.

It would be a shame to see the first pack of lions in Africa and have no decent photos of the memorable event to show your friends and family at home.

Unfortunately, many people who go on safari do not realize that the camera lens to take with you is the determining factor between wildlife get the picture when the subject is unrecognizable blob in a sea of vegetation compared to a new although framed picture black leaders maned lion pride.

I practiced photography on wildlife safari for over twenty years and I learned that the best lenses to arm yourself with when you go into the African bush to capture lasting quality images is proud to show everyone.

My advice is here for the casual photographer of wildlife, such as someone going on an African safari, and not for professional wildlife photographers who have different needs camera to take photographs for a lifetime.

To help you choose a goal to bring with you on safari, here is a list of factors you must consider before putting your money to …

1. Size of the lens

Any less than 300 mm for the general goal of the game you encounter on safari like lion, rhino, elephants, etc, it will be too small. A 400 mm provides a good picture of small animals like bushbuck, vervet monkeys and so on. If you aim to photographs of birds, a target is 600 mm trick.

2. Your budget

It is very easy to find lenses that cost thousands of dollars, but if you are in the first place will be useful for your safari trip and maybe a handful of wildlife, after the photo, you should not spend more a few hundred dollars. E ‘possible to reach a goal of high enough quality for your purpose of this award range.

3. Image Stabilization

It is not necessary, but if you can get a lens with image stabilization is a huge advantage for a safari because you can achieve the objective without much fear of blurring in the right light, which is particularly useful if you are not near a window in the safari vehicle or do not have enough space to position your beanbag or tripod.

4. Zoom Capability

Safari one lens is better than two, because the nature of the topic. When you encounter a leopard which has not had time to change the lens of the camera, they tend not to stay too long, so a lens with a good zoom is a great advantage for the capture of wildlife very you’re shy. Another reason not to change the goals that the powder was spread on an African safari the camera can cause blocking mechanisms.

While these four factors into consideration before purchasing and if you can find a goal that satisfies the above requirements you have a winner.

How to choose the best wildlife camera for your safari and which specific cameras come out tops in the compact and SLR categories.
These are the four best African photo safari National Parks and Game reserves.

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