Hi there! That also depends on the sensor - some cameras, like Canon 6D II have noisy shadows if you push them up in post. And also, noise is always more visible in the shadow areas.
Great video. I use a Nikon z6 with a Nikkor z24-200 lens and overall the images are superb, except when I zoom in to 200mm and focus on a particular object, say a house on a hill. More often than not it appears blurry, when I magnify it on the rear screen. Don’t know what I’m doing wrong. I’ve tried all different settings.
If you photograph a subject very very far, the waving atmosphere will blur the image. If the lens produces sharp images at 200 mm setting on a close subject (10 feet away), the atmosphere is the culprit. Especially on a hot day.
@@elizabethsquires9193 hi, I took the lens to a local camera shop and they said it was faulty. I contacted mpb, where I purchased it from and even though it was still under warranty would not accept responsibility. I’ve since bought the 24-120 lens and no such issues.
Shallow depth of focus when using a macro lens in low light with aprerture at maximum. Because the camera is not fixed on a tripod, it is easy to move the object out of the depth of focus while breathing or balancing!
@@miklosmayerphoto yes. In case of lens buying decision what should a person do when he had a camera without an in body image stabilizer. Did he go for a lens with IS or Without IS, how the result affects the image and video.
I guess then the shutter speed gets too long, and you'll get blurry photos because of handholding. I recommend using Auto ISO to avoid that, check out my video here: ruclips.net/video/5JNbeknCleM/видео.html
That may be due to slight miscalibration between the body and the lens. If it consisently back or front focuses, you should have the lens+body repaired. However, it's just much better to use mirrorless instead, cause there you wouldn't have this issue (most probably)
Nicely done your job ,many thanks. It is useful to me.
Glad it was helpful!🙏
I have photos when it's just a bit soft.... And I know it could be sharper so this is helpful. I will try your suggestions, thanks for this video
You are welcome!
Hi good informative videos. Why I am getting grain or noise even low iso but low light pictures. UV filter was ON on the lens.
Hi there! That also depends on the sensor - some cameras, like Canon 6D II have noisy shadows if you push them up in post.
And also, noise is always more visible in the shadow areas.
Great video. I use a Nikon z6 with a Nikkor z24-200 lens and overall the images are superb, except when I zoom in to 200mm and focus on a particular object, say a house on a hill. More often than not it appears blurry, when I magnify it on the rear screen. Don’t know what I’m doing wrong. I’ve tried all different settings.
If you photograph a subject very very far, the waving atmosphere will blur the image. If the lens produces sharp images at 200 mm setting on a close subject (10 feet away), the atmosphere is the culprit. Especially on a hot day.
Did you ever figure out the focus on your 24-200? I'm so frustrated with mine, no matter what I do my pictures are never sharp with this lens. 😢
@@elizabethsquires9193 hi, I took the lens to a local camera shop and they said it was faulty. I contacted mpb, where I purchased it from and even though it was still under warranty would not accept responsibility. I’ve since bought the 24-120 lens and no such issues.
Shallow depth of focus when using a macro lens in low light with aprerture at maximum. Because the camera is not fixed on a tripod, it is easy to move the object out of the depth of focus while breathing or balancing!
That's so true!
Thank you for the good video❤
Thank you, glad you liked it!
Wanna see a comparison between lens with IS Vs lens without IS in Canon R10.
Do you mean how effective the stabilisation is? Or the sharpness?
@@miklosmayerphoto yes. In case of lens buying decision what should a person do when he had a camera without an in body image stabilizer. Did he go for a lens with IS or Without IS, how the result affects the image and video.
Most of my blurry photos tend to happen when I’m in aperture priority and forget to change my iso settings.
I guess then the shutter speed gets too long, and you'll get blurry photos because of handholding. I recommend using Auto ISO to avoid that, check out my video here: ruclips.net/video/5JNbeknCleM/видео.html
@@miklosmayerphoto I will definitely check it out - thanks! 🤙🏼
Of course I always facing this problem even I focused on eye 70-200 disappointed me with my Canon 77.may be the combination is not good
That may be due to slight miscalibration between the body and the lens. If it consisently back or front focuses, you should have the lens+body repaired. However, it's just much better to use mirrorless instead, cause there you wouldn't have this issue (most probably)