bunn: (Rosie Down Hole)
[personal profile] bunn
Looking at those photos of bluebells I posted yesterday, I resolve to try to photograph bluebells in the evening, if I am photographing any more of them.  Those look ten times more blue and impressive than the ones I photographed in the sunny morning, and all the shadows have a wonderful blue tone to them, even though the camera was using the same colour balance settings.  I think those particular flowers were specially blue ones, but even so, the lighting is just better.

I am kind of pleased with my photos of bees.   They aren't close to publication standard, but there's a fair level of detail visible, for photos of insects on the move taken in passing as I went up to the compost heap.   I took them with my Nex3, which is starting to nudge into the 'older camera' category, and a 50mm Pentax-M lens that is positively venerable, having been manufactured in the pre-digital 80's for some long-vanished SLR, and crudely married to the Nex3 with a cunning converter ring thing.

I continue to be a bit in love with my manual-focus lenses - I have a selection of ancient Pentax PK-compatible fit lenses, that attach to my Sony Nex3 with a converter ring.

 I really like that you can so easily tell the camera *exactly* what you want in focus - no attempting to persuade an autofocus that thinks it should get a say in the composition what to include, just precise adjustment via the focus ring - and shoot.  My father in law was around here the other day with his new superzoom camera (Panasonic) which is undeniably an awesome bit of kit - amazingly light, and with a built-in lens that you could use to take photos through the window of a house on the other side of a large field - but as soon as I was allowed to play with it, I started to get a little frustrated with the autofocus mechanism.  Next time I buy a camera, I think I probably want one with manual focus at least as an option.

Date: 2014-05-05 07:24 pm (UTC)
ext_189645: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bunn.livejournal.com
My phone (a Nexus 4) definitely does a lot of processing on the images it takes. I like what it does with landscapes, mostly, although sometimes it applies too much sharpening, particularly to leaves in sunlight, it also tends to whack the vibrancy right up, which is great for sunsets and green leaves. But of course there is a limit to what you can really do with that small a lens: it's usually terrible at anything moving, unless it's right at midday.

Date: 2014-05-05 07:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wellinghall.livejournal.com
And with that small a sensor.

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