Instead of cropping out of your images, pick up a used 300mm F4 and 1.4x TC. Not only will you get better image quality, the investment will hold.
Nice shot. I haven't played much with filters yet. I only have one. ICan't even remember what it is, but it's on the tamron and its purpose is to protect the lens is all.
Yea lenses generally hold their value much better. The 300mm F4 is pretty expensive.
Hadn't thought about a TC lens at all. You lose a lot of light at all?
Forget color. Color is handled in post 100% of the time(color correction). Sharpness will depend in the sensor and the lens. Whether or not the lens will out resolve the sensor (what you want) or not depends if you have a high mp sensor bundled with a high lens.
Id look into the Sony a7s![]()
I haven't played much with filters yet. I only have one. ICan't even remember what it is, but it's on the tamron and its purpose is to protect the lens is all.
Sensors and raw format control the depth of color data. There's also a reason why the Nikon D810 beats the Sony with the same sensor....
Alright, I've decided to hold off on the body and try a new lens first. Going to sell the Tamson lens and try to pickup the 300m F4 and TC. I can always use the lenses with a better body and it's not like the D3000 body is going to depreciate much more then what it already has anyway.
Great decision.
The D3000 is certainly not among the best, but if you stay at lower ISO the images will still be great.
http://www.diyphotography.net/12bit-vs-14bit-raw-and-compressed-vs-uncompressed-does-it-matter/
here's an article comparing both 12 bit raw and 14 bit raw. 14 bit holds more data, but color recording doesn't seem to be very noticeable. Plus it's flat and unprocessed.
Just thought I'd throw this out there...Great decision.
The D3000 is certainly not among the best, but if you stay at lower ISO the images will still be great.