CuriousMike
Diamond Member
- Feb 22, 2001
- 3,044
- 544
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I 99% shoot stationary objects and am mostly on auto,
Don't come crying to CuriousMike when *the shot of your life* appears, and your camera decides to focus on the tree instead of big foot.
I 99% shoot stationary objects and am mostly on auto,
Also, you shot the squirrel at 55mm, 1/30 of a second.
The general "rule" is 1/focal length to stop shake(blur).
Your VR helped you in this case, and you must have auto-ISO on because it was boosted to 800.
Keep your shutter speed in mind if you want the sharpest photos.
Also, for moving subjects, be sure to use AF-C ( continuous autofocus. )
Note that AF-C doesn't work well with "focus and re-compose".
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Also since it is a crop camera, you will want it to be slightly faster so 1/(1.5xfocal length) is a good rule of thumb.
To add to this, and if you want to try something a little different, you can map the AF to the AE-L button on the back so you can focus separately from the shutter.
And as a side note about the RX100, I own tons of Nikon gear (worth more than my car...), but I've shot with my RX100 mk1 since I've gotten it. It's small enough to fit in my pocket so I can bring it with me when I otherwise wouldn't have a camera. Image quality is excellent, and you can easily bounce the flash for night photos. Probably the best $300 I've spent on a camera.
I never believed because it's a crop camera, you need to shoot faster rule. Think of it this way: You take a picture with a FF camera. You crop the image 1.5x smaller. Will it magnify the camera shake?
In my mind, I just generically keep it (1/focal length), whether on crop of FF.
My thinking is VR wipes away the 50% zoomed shake factor; i.e., I never take VR into account for my shutter speed.
It doesn't work that way. Say a tiny-sensor superzoom camera has a 10x crop factor. So it goes to 50mm (500mm full frame equivalent) at its longest end. Would you really shoot that superzoom at 1/50th of a second? Of course not. You have to multiply by the crop factor. So 1/f becomes 1/f*cf where f = focal length and cf = crop factor.
Also dirty secret but OS often doesn't help except at slower shutter speeds, like under 1/500th second so it's better to leave it off if you can keep your shutter speed at 1/500 or faster. YMMV.
mine is the D5200, but I don't think there's an appreciable difference for the purposes of this discussion. it's a friend of mine that has the D5100.No, of course not.
But I didn't bring into discussion a 1/2.3" sensor camera.
This discussion has revolved around a D5100.
There are lots of gotcha's with VR, including what you've described.
When should you use NORMAL vs ACTIVE VR?
Turn it off on a tripod.
Etc.
For me it is essential - I don't have time to manually focus except when using myOES 5DII with stationary subjects,
I use single point AF all the time.
Yes, if viewed at the same size, but at 100% they will be identical. The 1/focal length rule was designed for 35mm cameras. You want to use the effective full frame focal length. However it is only a rule of thumb and the pixel density of the sensor also has an effect. The ability to see camera shake is much more pronounced in a higher resolution camera than a lower resolution one. In your example, if you crop the photo you keep the same pixel density, so when viewed at 100% they will be identical.
For example an iPhone has a focal length of 4mm, which is equivalent to a 30mm focal length on a full frame camera. So you would want to shoot at at least 1/30s not 1/4s.
