Steve...As a frontline emergency physician and and professional photographer I want to thank you for your fantastic photography series. Coming home after busy shift in the ER, sitting down on my computer and listen to your informative talks on photography is a breath of fresh air. I wish you and your family a safe, healthy and enjoyable holiday season.
This is why Steve's channel is the best. He gets right to the point and couples his explanation with USEFUL examples. Unlike so many of the more popular photography TH-cam channels, Steve doesn't need bimbos, personality hacks, cheap humour and other eye-candy to keep the viewers' attention. Sweet, short classy instruction is the way to go.
Someone put the link to this video in a photography group. The subject was tack sharp photos, not necessarily shooting animals. This is one of the best videos that I have ever watched. I love the picture examples. Thank you Steve.
I have been watching your videos for 5 years and have not seen a better video tutorial bette than yours,you explain very well and easy to understand, thank you for this awesome videos !
Perfect explained, but most of them I know already. But nobody can explain it, clear and understandable, like you Steve! I am always on manual mode and adjust by myself shutter speed and aperture as necessary. And.....not be scared of may be high ISO. It’s better than a blurred picture. Thanks Steve for this video.......
Steve, your idea of using a high shutter speed has completely changed the way I take birds pics. They are much sharper than they used to be earlier. Thank you so much for this great tip.
Shutting at noon ,the brighter the light helps shutter speeds. The myth that noon is a bad time to take photos listened to old wives tails. Love your help ....cheers
Honestly one of if not the best channel for photo tips. Getting better images always happens after watching one of your videos and learning something new.
I been doing nature photography for 20 years and you taught me something in 5 minutes. Heat diffraction never occured to me and explains a lot as i am a Florida nature photographer.
Great stuff, thanks for your efforts Steve, this is gold for new people to the world of wildlife photography. Also very handy when it comes down to a refresh for people teaching in seminars. Great upload once again by what I consider, hands down ,the number one YT photography channel
Despite knowing my stuff, I can easily say I couldn't come close to the quality of Steve's teaching skills and ability to put al this information in easy to understand context. Anytime I come across someone in areas I like to shoot, I always point them to this channel.
Steve, I am a long time (30+ year) hobbyist but, new to wildlife photography and your videos are the most informative I've seen. I am very comfortable behind a camera but this genre is new to me. Thanks for all of your time and effort.
Steve my man! Your wisdom isn't unappreciated. I've got far better shots as an amateur wildlife photographer. Appreciate it! Also cheers from Sri Lanka 🍻
Great advice Steve.... I might also add the importance of learning not only all the functions your camera has to offer, but learn all the different ways they can be used to your advantage or disadvantage....
Steve...As a person who is not a frontline emergency physician and also not a professional photographer I want to thank you for your fantastic photography series. Coming home from after driving by or maybe near or even in the same town as the ER, sitting down on my computer and listen to your informative talks on photography is a breath of fresh air. I wish you and your family a safe, healthy and enjoyable holiday season. 👍👍
Truely grateful was using monopod with my 600 zoom & struggling then saw that that I could use my tripod with it & now happy with my purchase. Seem that I should have known this but I didn’t. Thank you.
Great Video Steve. No matter how long we have been shooting and no matter how many times we think we have the fundamentals down its so important to return and review them. I had one of those, Oh yeah moments remembering how I forgot one of these.
Tip 9 Steve ..... don't over extend your lens .... My 200- 500mm lens on a D500 gives me great image quality at 10 metres ... but at 30M it really falls off and IQ degrades. Thanks for your tips ... always so well explained
Nice. Thanks for the refresher. I’ve recently bought my heaviest lens yet (200-500 f5.6) and boy hand holding is becoming a challenge for the first time ever.
I had weeks of struggles with my Nikkor 70-300mm f4.5-5.6 before I learned about af fine tune. I was told over and over not to mess with it though, finally after ignoring everyone, a -7 compensation took me from zero sharp bird images to over 75% of my images being tac sharp. I would up picking up a focusing card and all but one of my lenses have been adjusted now and provide much better results.
Wow, another eye-opener..thanks for the tip on the effect of the cool air outside and the warm air within the car...never gave it a thought but glad you did.. :-)
Perfect advice Steve, thank you. I have a Nikon D5600 with a 70-300 kit lens which I struggle to get sharp images at the maximum focal length. I will try your suggestions as I’m sure they are the likely causes of my dull images. 👍🏻
Great video. I visited South America a few years ago and took a bridge camera with me for convenience, I knew I was making a mistake but did anyway. I'm going to Central America this year so plan on taking my Nikon D750 with the 80-400 lens so will definitely practise and use these great tips before I go, thank you.
Hi Steve! I bought your eBook last night and I really appreciate your dedication to teaching. Your videos are fantastic and full of useful instruction.
It is now summer in India. I can't really get out of my schedule to photograph birds. Waking up in the morning is difficult to get out because the sun rises at 4:30 in the morning. And the afternoon is very hot! So here i am, watching your videos after dinner while laying on the rooftop of our rental house.
Thanks, i use a mikon d7100 with a kit lens 55-200!! Not the best but all i have. Today for fun i cranked my ISO up to 6400 and tried shooting at shutter speeds 1500-2000 plus. Will try different combos. Thanks for helping paint outside the lines 😂😂😂👍👍👍 all best from the Bahamas
Great advise as Always, but your book "Secrets to Auto Focus" is irreplaceable and although I have been a wildlife photographer for over 20 years I still picked up loads of information with discipline being at the top, cheers and keep safe. Ian (UK)
Thanks Steve. I just bought a Tamron 150-600 G2 for my D850. I was planning on tuning it with the included Tap-In Console before I start using it, thanks to you and this video, I think I’ll wait and see.
😂 at least she's there. My husband would never accompany me when taking wildlife photos. I have a lot of photos of the back of him in our touristy ones 😂😂
I have given tripod multiple tries. Finally, settled using it when I shoot water birds and waders. Stopped chasing forest birds. However, for BIF shots, no choice but to handhold. I use Canon 7D with Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L for this purpose. Always keep the shutter speed above 1/2000.
I ve learnt so much from you Steve. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge with us. I m improving my photography by the day while applying what i watch on your channel 🙏
Spot on! With respect to the IS-on-tripod issue this comes from the first generation of Canon IS where it was explicitly advised againts using it on a tripod and for good reasons. Later versions of all brands are just sensitive enough to sense the absence or presence of even very small levels of vibration and reliably hold still in its absence. They also do not sense if they are on a tripod - there is no switch in the screw-hole or whatever - they just reliably sense vibration. Therefore, if you have the camera on tripod and wind-gust induces vibrations into your long lens even on a heavy tripod with a fixed beefy ballhead, IS helps to eliminate that. Just dont use IS on a tripod set to active or sport while not panning, as this might induce more blur than it removes.
Thank you for iterating using image stabilization with tele-zooms while mounted on a tripod, I shoot with a Nikon D7200/Tamron 150-600mm mounted on a tripod with a ball head and get good results with shutter speeds lower than 1/350th. However, I mostly shoot perched birds with it.
Always a pleasure to watch your videos Steve - and never fail to learn something new everytime .Thanks very much for all the effort you put into your videos- really appreciated
VR + electronic shutter + sturdy tripod and head = great combination for owls! I once did a small experiment with my 600FL in VR normal mode on my Z6 set to electronic shutter but that was back when I had my old Gitzo 3 series and a Gitzo ball head - which was a bit undersized to be honest. I now use the Sachtler Flowtech 75 with FSB-8 fluid head which is much more solid and damping. However, here are the results of how many shots out of 10 that I fired off with each shutter speed were sharp (using my old Gitzo setup): 1/4sec - 30% 1/5sec - 10% 1/6sec - 30% 1/8sec - 40% 1/10sec - 50% 1/13sec - 70% 1/15sec - 60% Now it may look odd that I sometimes got a better keeper rate with slower shutter speeds than with higher ones. But this only reflects how prone to even the slightest movements of your own body / arm it is to use those really slow shutter speeds. And on top, I started really concentrated on standing still and then I probably got a bit sloppy and more unstable throughout the experiment. I also should have made more than just 10 shots with each shutter speed I guess. I'll definitely repeat the whole experiment with my Sachtler tripod and head! With all those numbers above looking not that promising at first, I'd still prefer trying to fire off a burst with VR and electronic shutter enabled and then just browse though them and throw the blurry ones away at home rather than not trying at all. And yes, electronic shutter still has some impact on the keeper rate as even the shutter in those new mirrorless cameras produce some slight vibration that the VR has to compensate for. By eliminating this source of vibration (i.e. switching to full electronic shutter for slow shutter speeds with VR) one can "help" the VR. As I drop below 1/20sec I still find that my keeper rate is even higher with a remote or cable trigger and VR turned off though. But sometimes you can't use a remote as you always need to adjust the focus point or you just forgot it at home ...
Excellent clear advice. I have discovered these methods the hard way, by trial and error. If I had seen your video earlier it would have saved a lot of time and disappointment.
Good video. I once had a Dotterel only 15 feet in front of me on a cold morning with strong sunlight. I lowered my gear to the ground and shot away. Back home on the screen the shots were all soft. I worked out why in the end - it was air turbulence near the ground. Lesson learned!
Some great tips! I usually try to keep the car fairly cool when shooting in winter (80% of my shooting here in Canada) but that's to keep the lens/sensor/mirror(previous to mirrorless) from fogging if I leave the car and return. Never thought about heat shimmer, but makes perfect sense.
this was DEFENITELY the beeeeeeeeeeeeest video i saw. And look, i saw like 2000 videos these days searching good explanation about technicals for birds. AWSOME job man. Subscribed s2
thank goodness i stumbled on to this video while looking for something else!!! Great focus advice that I will immediately try on my Nikon D850. Thank you!!!
Hi Steve. I'm just wondering (as I do whenever I'm in "mad professor" mode): has any photographer ever come up with the idea of the "bipod"? To my mind it would be a winner. When the bulk and spread - not to mention the weight - of a tripod becomes unfeasible; and a monopod doesn't give you the steadiness, especially laterally, that you demand; then surely a bipod (with two legs) would fill the void. Double legs will not only save on space and weigh, but will give you the lateral steadiness of a tripod. Moreover, you (the photographer) provide, in yourself, the third tripod leg. I think such a device (if it already exists) would be a boon to wildlife shooting. What do you think?
very nice content and video. i’ve got the feeling that quite a few issues are resolved in mirrorless cameras like: - AF tracking/locking over full area of the frame - front/back focusing - or even such fancy toys like eye-af is helpful I need to check more about lenses “sensing” the tripod and differenced between C, N and S...
Started to watch and completely liked the advice you were giving and subed right away. Thank you for your no BS talk and straight to the point I look forwards and going back to see your other clips.
With group AF on Nikons at least, it shows a grid of 9 points, but will put priority on the center point. If the area of focus falls out of the center point but into one of those 8 other boxes, then it will refocus where it has tracked the subject (an eye) to. So if you use Group AF for example, ensure that the center point (which is not always shown on some cameras) on the eye (for example on some of the Nikon DSLRs you get a cross, but there are really 9 points, even though it shows you 4 in a diamond formation).
Steve...As a frontline emergency physician and and professional photographer I want to thank you for your fantastic photography series. Coming home after busy shift in the ER, sitting down on my computer and listen to your informative talks on photography is a breath of fresh air. I wish you and your family a safe, healthy and enjoyable holiday season.
This is why Steve's channel is the best. He gets right to the point and couples his explanation with USEFUL examples.
Unlike so many of the more popular photography TH-cam channels, Steve doesn't need bimbos, personality hacks, cheap humour and other eye-candy to keep the viewers' attention.
Sweet, short classy instruction is the way to go.
You always explain everything so well Steve.
In terms of explaining photography Steve and Mark Smith are in a class of their own. Great work again thanks Steve 👍👍
Mark smith ... The Bird and Osprey guy... i know him now..
I totally agree!
Someone put the link to this video in a photography group. The subject was tack sharp photos, not necessarily shooting animals. This is one of the best videos that I have ever watched. I love the picture examples. Thank you Steve.
This video is how it should be done, straight to the point, no filler, useful information. Thanks for sharing
I have been watching your videos for 5 years and have not seen a better video tutorial bette than yours,you explain very well and easy to understand, thank you for this awesome videos !
Perfect explained, but most of them I know already. But nobody can explain it, clear and understandable, like you Steve!
I am always on manual mode and adjust by myself shutter speed and aperture as necessary.
And.....not be scared of may be high ISO. It’s better than a blurred picture.
Thanks Steve for this video.......
Steve, your idea of using a high shutter speed has completely changed the way I take birds pics. They are much sharper than they used to be earlier. Thank you so much for this great tip.
Shutting at noon ,the brighter the light helps shutter speeds. The myth that noon is a bad time to take photos listened to old wives tails. Love your help ....cheers
Honestly one of if not the best channel for photo tips. Getting better images always happens after watching one of your videos and learning something new.
I been doing nature photography for 20 years and you taught me something in 5 minutes. Heat diffraction never occured to me and explains a lot as i am a Florida nature photographer.
I've had more than one photo suffer from this but had no ability to move closer.
@@johnnicholson8345 nnn
Great stuff, thanks for your efforts Steve, this is gold for new people to the world of wildlife photography. Also very handy when it comes down to a refresh for people teaching in seminars. Great upload once again by what I consider, hands down ,the number one YT photography channel
Many thanks!
Despite knowing my stuff, I can easily say I couldn't come close to the quality of Steve's teaching skills and ability to put al this information in easy to understand context. Anytime I come across someone in areas I like to shoot, I always point them to this channel.
Steve, I am a long time (30+ year) hobbyist but, new to wildlife photography and your videos are the most informative I've seen.
I am very comfortable behind a camera but this genre is new to me.
Thanks for all of your time and effort.
Steve, you are awesome! Precise, to the point, objective, no BS. Love it.
Steve my man! Your wisdom isn't unappreciated. I've got far better shots as an amateur wildlife photographer. Appreciate it! Also cheers from Sri Lanka 🍻
Great advice Steve.... I might also add the importance of learning not only all the functions your camera has to offer, but learn all the different ways they can be used to your advantage or disadvantage....
Thanks, Steve.... Your videos have been a great help as I jump into the world of mirrorless and wildlife photography. You're one of the best!
Thanks so much!
Steve...As a person who is not a frontline emergency physician and also not a professional photographer I want to thank you for your fantastic photography series. Coming home from after driving by or maybe near or even in the same town as the ER, sitting down on my computer and listen to your informative talks on photography is a breath of fresh air. I wish you and your family a safe, healthy and enjoyable holiday season. 👍👍
I have been looking all over for this kind of advice with no help. This video helped so much! Thank you!!!
Truely grateful was using monopod with my 600 zoom & struggling then saw that that I could use my tripod with it & now happy with my purchase. Seem that I should have known this but I didn’t. Thank you.
Great Video Steve. No matter how long we have been shooting and no matter how many times we think we have the fundamentals down its so important to return and review them. I had one of those, Oh yeah moments remembering how I forgot one of these.
In costa rica, shooting wildlife, this helped quite a bit this morning. Thanksb
Tip 9 Steve ..... don't over extend your lens .... My 200- 500mm lens on a D500 gives me great image quality at 10 metres ... but at 30M it really falls off and IQ degrades.
Thanks for your tips ... always so well explained
Nice. Thanks for the refresher. I’ve recently bought my heaviest lens yet (200-500 f5.6) and boy hand holding is becoming a challenge for the first time ever.
It's a chunk. I like that one on a monopod for extended shoots.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and wisdom. Greatly appreciate your work.
I had weeks of struggles with my Nikkor 70-300mm f4.5-5.6 before I learned about af fine tune. I was told over and over not to mess with it though, finally after ignoring everyone, a -7 compensation took me from zero sharp bird images to over 75% of my images being tac sharp. I would up picking up a focusing card and all but one of my lenses have been adjusted now and provide much better results.
No nonsense video, direct, clear, very good video !!!
Wow, another eye-opener..thanks for the tip on the effect of the cool air outside and the warm air within the car...never gave it a thought but glad you did.. :-)
Perfect advice Steve, thank you. I have a Nikon D5600 with a 70-300 kit lens which I struggle to get sharp images at the maximum focal length. I will try your suggestions as I’m sure they are the likely causes of my dull images. 👍🏻
Great video. I visited South America a few years ago and took a bridge camera with me for convenience, I knew I was making a mistake but did anyway. I'm going to Central America this year so plan on taking my Nikon D750 with the 80-400 lens so will definitely practise and use these great tips before I go, thank you.
Hi Steve! I bought your eBook last night and I really appreciate your dedication to teaching. Your videos are fantastic and full of useful instruction.
Thank you so much!
It is now summer in India. I can't really get out of my schedule to photograph birds. Waking up in the morning is difficult to get out because the sun rises at 4:30 in the morning. And the afternoon is very hot!
So here i am, watching your videos after dinner while laying on the rooftop of our rental house.
thank you very much for this bundle of advice with examples....
pretty explanation and presentation, thank you so much to share with us watching from Srilanka
Thanks, i use a mikon d7100 with a kit lens 55-200!! Not the best but all i have. Today for fun i cranked my ISO up to 6400 and tried shooting at shutter speeds 1500-2000 plus. Will try different combos. Thanks for helping paint outside the lines 😂😂😂👍👍👍 all best from the Bahamas
All excellent points! There's so much that goes into sharpness that we often don't realize.
Muchas gracias por los consejos de siempre, Steve! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 Saludos desde Argentina
Great video! Not just in the information provided but the presentation and flow was perfect. I could have really used this video a year ago!
Great advise as Always, but your book "Secrets to Auto Focus" is irreplaceable and although I have been a wildlife photographer for over 20 years I still picked up loads of information with discipline being at the top, cheers and keep safe. Ian (UK)
Thank you!
I have faced most of the problems you mentioned in this video. You taught well to overcome those. Thanks very much Steve.
Great advice on how to get sharp images I recently been shooting more wildlife thank for the tips,
Thanks Steve. I just bought a Tamron 150-600 G2 for my D850. I was planning on tuning it with the included Tap-In Console before I start using it, thanks to you and this video, I think I’ll wait and see.
Thank you for your extremely helpful tips.
I am a beginner in photography, thank you this video will give a guidance
Excellent information! Now I need to show my wife that I HAVE to get out the car for better shots. She is not patient with my photography needs.
Or you can justify to her that you can stay in the car but you have to turn heat off...lol
lol..
😂 at least she's there. My husband would never accompany me when taking wildlife photos. I have a lot of photos of the back of him in our touristy ones 😂😂
@@Bassbarbie Been there, done that (of my wife's back that is) LOL
Great video Mr. Perry! You are very clear and right to the point. Please keep them coming!
I have given tripod multiple tries. Finally, settled using it when I shoot water birds and waders. Stopped chasing forest birds.
However, for BIF shots, no choice but to handhold. I use Canon 7D with Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L for this purpose. Always keep the shutter speed above 1/2000.
Very helpful Steve, you explain so clearly.
I ve learnt so much from you Steve. Thank you for sharing all your knowledge with us. I m improving my photography by the day while applying what i watch on your channel 🙏
I appreciate all these tips thank you so much!!!
Spot on! With respect to the IS-on-tripod issue this comes from the first generation of Canon IS where it was explicitly advised againts using it on a tripod and for good reasons. Later versions of all brands are just sensitive enough to sense the absence or presence of even very small levels of vibration and reliably hold still in its absence. They also do not sense if they are on a tripod - there is no switch in the screw-hole or whatever - they just reliably sense vibration. Therefore, if you have the camera on tripod and wind-gust induces vibrations into your long lens even on a heavy tripod with a fixed beefy ballhead, IS helps to eliminate that. Just dont use IS on a tripod set to active or sport while not panning, as this might induce more blur than it removes.
Even though we all miss the original Journey lineup, I very much enjoy your photography videos 🙂
Thank you for iterating using image stabilization with tele-zooms while mounted on a tripod, I shoot with a Nikon D7200/Tamron 150-600mm mounted on a tripod with a ball head and get good results with shutter speeds lower than 1/350th. However, I mostly shoot perched birds with it.
Thank you, I'm new to wildlife photography, this vid has some great advice👍
I shoot with a Sony A7Rii and Sigma 100-400mm
Excellent and easy to follow.
Super clear and informative video. Thanks Steve.
I've JUST realized my shutter speed wasn't fast enough!!!!! Thanks steve!!!
Thank you for sharing the wonderful knowledge
I look forward to putting your advice into practice. Thank you for the video
Your tips are the best out of everyone online , thanks for your awesome advice Steve. 👌👍
Some great advice there on the Z7ii camera. Thanks.
Always a pleasure to watch your videos Steve - and never fail to learn something new everytime .Thanks very much for all the effort you put into your videos- really appreciated
VR + electronic shutter + sturdy tripod and head = great combination for owls! I once did a small experiment with my 600FL in VR normal mode on my Z6 set to electronic shutter but that was back when I had my old Gitzo 3 series and a Gitzo ball head - which was a bit undersized to be honest. I now use the Sachtler Flowtech 75 with FSB-8 fluid head which is much more solid and damping.
However, here are the results of how many shots out of 10 that I fired off with each shutter speed were sharp (using my old Gitzo setup):
1/4sec - 30%
1/5sec - 10%
1/6sec - 30%
1/8sec - 40%
1/10sec - 50%
1/13sec - 70%
1/15sec - 60%
Now it may look odd that I sometimes got a better keeper rate with slower shutter speeds than with higher ones. But this only reflects how prone to even the slightest movements of your own body / arm it is to use those really slow shutter speeds. And on top, I started really concentrated on standing still and then I probably got a bit sloppy and more unstable throughout the experiment. I also should have made more than just 10 shots with each shutter speed I guess.
I'll definitely repeat the whole experiment with my Sachtler tripod and head!
With all those numbers above looking not that promising at first, I'd still prefer trying to fire off a burst with VR and electronic shutter enabled and then just browse though them and throw the blurry ones away at home rather than not trying at all. And yes, electronic shutter still has some impact on the keeper rate as even the shutter in those new mirrorless cameras produce some slight vibration that the VR has to compensate for. By eliminating this source of vibration (i.e. switching to full electronic shutter for slow shutter speeds with VR) one can "help" the VR.
As I drop below 1/20sec I still find that my keeper rate is even higher with a remote or cable trigger and VR turned off though. But sometimes you can't use a remote as you always need to adjust the focus point or you just forgot it at home ...
Hey,
this is the first video that explains so many technics so well in a short time.
Well done ✔
Go on like this.
Perfect
I learned a lot about filming in Nature with this video. Many, many thanks. Greetings from Switzerland.
Have to show my appreciation - sports photographer here...and content can really be adapted to sports. Cheers
Excellent clear advice. I have discovered these methods the hard way, by trial and error. If I had seen your video earlier it would have saved a lot of time and disappointment.
You are very convincing because your video camera has such a clear/sharp picture.
Great video... very informative & easy to understand. Thanks for posting!
Good video. I once had a Dotterel only 15 feet in front of me on a cold morning with strong sunlight. I lowered my gear to the ground and shot away. Back home on the screen the shots were all soft. I worked out why in the end - it was air turbulence near the ground. Lesson learned!
This has really helped a lot!!!
Great tips. Thanks. Just as well higher ISO on newer cameras is not a big issue anymore.
Some great tips! I usually try to keep the car fairly cool when shooting in winter (80% of my shooting here in Canada) but that's to keep the lens/sensor/mirror(previous to mirrorless) from fogging if I leave the car and return. Never thought about heat shimmer, but makes perfect sense.
Awesome advice! Just recently started trying to shoot the birds at my feeder and these lessons immediately payed off in some great shots.
Good video man ! Thanks for all the advice
Thanks Steve. Another well done video. Your information is invaluable.
Fantastic video. Thank you for creating it and for sharing all this information with us!
this was DEFENITELY the beeeeeeeeeeeeest video i saw. And look, i saw like 2000 videos these days searching good explanation about technicals for birds. AWSOME job man. Subscribed s2
thank goodness i stumbled on to this video while looking for something else!!! Great focus advice that I will immediately try on my Nikon D850. Thank you!!!
Hi Steve. I'm just wondering (as I do whenever I'm in "mad professor" mode): has any photographer ever come up with the idea of the "bipod"? To my mind it would be a winner. When the bulk and spread - not to mention the weight - of a tripod becomes unfeasible; and a monopod doesn't give you the steadiness, especially laterally, that you demand; then surely a bipod (with two legs) would fill the void. Double legs will not only save on space and weigh, but will give you the lateral steadiness of a tripod. Moreover, you (the photographer) provide, in yourself, the third tripod leg. I think such a device (if it already exists) would be a boon to wildlife shooting. What do you think?
very nice content and video. i’ve got the feeling that quite a few issues are resolved in mirrorless cameras like:
- AF tracking/locking over full area of the frame
- front/back focusing
- or even such fancy toys like eye-af is helpful
I need to check more about lenses “sensing” the tripod and differenced between C, N and S...
Thank you for the tips! 👍
Love that hawk (roadside) picture. It’s great All-Around
Great vid Steve! 👍👍👍Do you have some intel about your tripod and the loose tripod head? THNX 👌
Thnx for best tips Steve... Following you...
Started to watch and completely liked the advice you were giving and subed right away. Thank you for your no BS talk and straight to the point I look forwards and going back to see your other clips.
Another excellent video Steve. Your presentation skills are second to none.
Perfect explain for an amature. I will try those things as soon as possible. Thanks for uploading this video!!
Thank you, your videos are really a pleasure to follow, so packed with useful info and tips
Finally found a helpful video on this subject! Thank you.
Hope you're feeling better Steve. Wish you a quick recovery😁👍
Thanks so much :)
Thanks so much for all your information.
Great advice. I actually used my tripod for some waterfowl birding for the first time and what a difference.
Hey Steve. Thanks. But Pentax user. New follower and will catch up. Glad i found you.
Thank you..very helpful.
Great video Steve, I am so glad I found you on TH-cam
Superb tips, thanks and thumbs up
With group AF on Nikons at least, it shows a grid of 9 points, but will put priority on the center point. If the area of focus falls out of the center point but into one of those 8 other boxes, then it will refocus where it has tracked the subject (an eye) to. So if you use Group AF for example, ensure that the center point (which is not always shown on some cameras) on the eye (for example on some of the Nikon DSLRs you get a cross, but there are really 9 points, even though it shows you 4 in a diamond formation).
Excellent video. Thank you.