xmesox
Bryn De Kocks
Hey guys,
I am currently shooting with a Canon 550D and until recently I was using it with a Sigma 50-500mm lens, but the images were a bit soft for me, so I upgraded to a Canon 400mm 5.6 L, after reading rave reviews from almost all it's users.
Since having the lens my image quality as increased a bit, but not nearly as much as I had thought it may, and doesn't seem to be up to the same standards as most of the other images I've seen with the 400mm 5.6L, I'm not sure if this is an issue with the lens or my camera body. I haven't seen too many images with this combination so it'd hard for me to judge, but having seen images from somewhat similar bodies as far as ISO noise (50D, 60D) my results tend to be inferior to those.
I generally need to shoot at around ISO 800 to keep a shutter speed above 1/1000 at the lenses sharpest F7.1, but in good lighting have it down at ISO 400, or even ISO 200 (black shouldered kite image) for birds that aren't in flight.
My main problem is that the images are just not sharp, the attached image of the Rock Kestral and the Jackal Buzzard were shot at around 1/1250 ISO800 and F7.1 and I'd say they are about 70% and 85% crops respectively. The Black Shouldered Kite image was shot at around ISO 200, F7.1 and 1/1600.
The images were shot in RAW and some sharpening done.
I realize that the 550D has less than great auto-focusing with only 1 cross-focal point, and wonder if that may be to blame? Though even on birds that are perched, such as the Black Shouldered Kite image, which is very lightly cropped, the images aren't as sharp as the images I usually see from this lens.
The attached images have been compressed a bit, but looking at the raw files and these compressed jpegs, the results aren't very different, though if you feel the original less compressed jpegs are imperative, let me know and I'll upload them.
Is using 70% - 100% crops common? Am I trying to crop too much and expecting too much from the crops? Are others just generally much closer to the birds?
Any help would be appreciated.
I am currently shooting with a Canon 550D and until recently I was using it with a Sigma 50-500mm lens, but the images were a bit soft for me, so I upgraded to a Canon 400mm 5.6 L, after reading rave reviews from almost all it's users.
Since having the lens my image quality as increased a bit, but not nearly as much as I had thought it may, and doesn't seem to be up to the same standards as most of the other images I've seen with the 400mm 5.6L, I'm not sure if this is an issue with the lens or my camera body. I haven't seen too many images with this combination so it'd hard for me to judge, but having seen images from somewhat similar bodies as far as ISO noise (50D, 60D) my results tend to be inferior to those.
I generally need to shoot at around ISO 800 to keep a shutter speed above 1/1000 at the lenses sharpest F7.1, but in good lighting have it down at ISO 400, or even ISO 200 (black shouldered kite image) for birds that aren't in flight.
My main problem is that the images are just not sharp, the attached image of the Rock Kestral and the Jackal Buzzard were shot at around 1/1250 ISO800 and F7.1 and I'd say they are about 70% and 85% crops respectively. The Black Shouldered Kite image was shot at around ISO 200, F7.1 and 1/1600.
The images were shot in RAW and some sharpening done.
I realize that the 550D has less than great auto-focusing with only 1 cross-focal point, and wonder if that may be to blame? Though even on birds that are perched, such as the Black Shouldered Kite image, which is very lightly cropped, the images aren't as sharp as the images I usually see from this lens.
The attached images have been compressed a bit, but looking at the raw files and these compressed jpegs, the results aren't very different, though if you feel the original less compressed jpegs are imperative, let me know and I'll upload them.
Is using 70% - 100% crops common? Am I trying to crop too much and expecting too much from the crops? Are others just generally much closer to the birds?
Any help would be appreciated.