For the experienced one's:
How much shutter speed is good enough to prevent pic from blurring due to hand shake (on a camera/lens without image stablization)?
Does this vary with telephoto & wide end ?
Thanks
Raj Goldmember 2,050 posts Joined Dec 2004 Location: Tokyo, Japan More info | Jan 31, 2005 00:21 | #1 For the experienced one's: 1DX, 5D, 20D with BG E2, Sigma EX DG 8mm F3.5 Circular Fish Eye, EF 15 mm f2.8 fish eye, EFS 10-22 mm f3.5-4.5, EF 24-70 F2.8 L mark ii, EF 24-105 f4 L IS, EF 16-35 f2.8 L , Sigma 35mm f1.4 A, 50 f1.8 mkII, 50 mm F1.2 L, EF f85mm 1.8, EF 100 f2.8 macro, EF 135 F2 L, Sigma 70-200 f2.8 EX HSM, EF 70-200 f2.8 L, IS USM mark ii, EF 100-400 f4.5-5.6 L IS, Sigma 18-125 f3.5-5.6 DC, APO 1.4x, G3, Cheapy Velbon Sherpa 435, Slick Carbon Fiber, Speedlite 430EX and 580EX with stofen OM-EW
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kb244 Senior Member 766 posts Joined Jun 2003 Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan More info | Jan 31, 2005 00:43 | #2 For subjects that are generally not moving, 1/60 is what most people say you can do. But the general rule is 1 over the focal length. Meaning if you have a 100mm lens, min shutter speed you want is 1/100 handheld, and so on. This doesnt always work when you got low-light situations. Also with moving subjects, if you had a 50mm lens, 1/50 will keep blur from happening due to camera shake, but most subjects move faster than 1/50 of a second. -Karl Blessing
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robertwgross Cream of the Crop 9,462 posts Likes: 3 Joined Nov 2002 Location: California More info | As Karl suggested, there is no easy answer.
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Jan 31, 2005 01:16 | #4 Thanks Robert & Karl, 1DX, 5D, 20D with BG E2, Sigma EX DG 8mm F3.5 Circular Fish Eye, EF 15 mm f2.8 fish eye, EFS 10-22 mm f3.5-4.5, EF 24-70 F2.8 L mark ii, EF 24-105 f4 L IS, EF 16-35 f2.8 L , Sigma 35mm f1.4 A, 50 f1.8 mkII, 50 mm F1.2 L, EF f85mm 1.8, EF 100 f2.8 macro, EF 135 F2 L, Sigma 70-200 f2.8 EX HSM, EF 70-200 f2.8 L, IS USM mark ii, EF 100-400 f4.5-5.6 L IS, Sigma 18-125 f3.5-5.6 DC, APO 1.4x, G3, Cheapy Velbon Sherpa 435, Slick Carbon Fiber, Speedlite 430EX and 580EX with stofen OM-EW
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kb244 Senior Member 766 posts Joined Jun 2003 Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan More info | Jan 31, 2005 03:02 | #5 Lighting and shallow DOF is always an issue with macro photography, Depend on what macro lens you have, I have a sigma 105mm macro, more working range, furthermore, I use a full manual Vivitar 283 flash with off-shoe cable to position it where I need. -Karl Blessing
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Monito Senior Member 460 posts Likes: 2 Joined Jan 2005 Location: Halifax, NS, ex-California More info | The rule of "one divided by focal length" applies to 35mm cameras. There, a 50mm "normal" field of view lens should do well enough at 1/50 or 1/60, if you use good technique: make body tripod (one foot forward, second foot a bit behind at an angle), left hand under the camera body, right hand on shutter button, both elbows resting on your body, take a breath and naturally exhale it out, pausing for just a second while you squeeze the shutter at the bottom of the breath. With technique like that you should be able to get a high percentage of shots at 1/30. But raising the shutter speed should make most shots crisper anyway, i.e. try not to go below 1/125 unless needed and always squeeze the shutter gently while maintaining the proper posture. Canon System: fullframe DSLRs, lenses. Tripods, Alien Bees.
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b00 Mostly Lurking 10 posts Joined Jan 2005 More info | I guess my question is round about this topic as well. Had a powershot s1 IS that I got a lot of enjoyment out of, but apparently someone else thought they'd enjoy it more than I would, and decided to abscond with it, much to my chagrin. Anyway, I was heartbroken for a while, but the wounds were soon healed by a nice Christmas check which was magically turned into a EOS Digital Rebel. I love this thing to death, but after perusing the manual and what not, i'm still at a bit of a loss as to what settings to use in which situations.
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kb244 Senior Member 766 posts Joined Jun 2003 Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan More info | Jan 31, 2005 13:07 | #8 Well sports , I would keep least 1/125 to 1/500 around that range, depending on the lens you are using. If you are using the kit lens, then 1/125 will keep from the camera shake, but you may have to go upto 1/500 depending on how fast the action is, do not be afraid to use ISO 800 or 1600, sometimes you have to use it. -Karl Blessing
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b00 Mostly Lurking 10 posts Joined Jan 2005 More info | Thanks for the info, i'll give it a shot tonight at practice. I am using the kit lens for now, but am looking into purchasing a telephoto lens, maybe even that 1.8f lens you spoke of since generally we're fairly close to the action (on the bench, standing on the sidelines or 20feet away in the seats). Is there a recommendation on telephotos floating around?
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kb244 Senior Member 766 posts Joined Jun 2003 Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan More info | b00 wrote: ... edit: wow, where do you find a decent f/2.8 lens that doesn't cost more than my camera did originally? Most of the mid-range priced ones I see are like f/4 or so..
-Karl Blessing
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b00 Mostly Lurking 10 posts Joined Jan 2005 More info | Is sigma going to be a decent brand? or stick to canon stuff? When I was shopping around for my camera, I noticed lots of packages that included sigma gear. I held off on getting a big package because I wasn't sure of the quality and so forth... Didn't know if it was a case of a lens is a lens is a lens or not..
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Jesper Goldmember 2,742 posts Joined Oct 2003 Location: The Netherlands More info | Jan 31, 2005 13:55 | #12 Note that with "motion blur", people generally mean the movement of the subject, not the movement of the camera due to the shaking of your hands - some people read your question as being about freezing subject motion (Karl, kb244), others read it as being about camera shake blur (Monito). Canon EOS 5D Mark III
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kb244 Senior Member 766 posts Joined Jun 2003 Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan More info | Jan 31, 2005 13:57 | #13 It depends, I mean I'd love to stick with the canon brand if I can afford it. But Sigma is usally my second choice brand when I want/need a lens. But the thing about using a diff brand than Canon, is that some are cheap ( like the ones advertized in a package ), and some are damn decent lens. I love my Sigma 105, I wouldnt mind having the Canon 100 Macro, but didnt want to nor could I afford the extra 200-300 $. Also keep in mind, if you are comparing a Canon 'L' Glass telephoto to a sigma, there really no comparism. Many folks here on the forums, already have the L-addiction. -Karl Blessing
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kb244 Senior Member 766 posts Joined Jun 2003 Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan More info | Jan 31, 2005 13:59 | #14 What Jesper said, for example my 28-135 USM IS, I could ideally slow the shutter 'almost' 2 stops slower, and still keep ok from camera shake, but its not gona help subject motion, you could try to pan with your subject, but extremities like arms, legs, etc might get blured as well. Its one of the reasons why I find sports sometimes difficult, you need more light, you can get more light by decreasing the shutter speed, but then your subjects get blured, you can try to get more light by decreasing the aperture, but not all lens can open wide enough, and if you did have a 2.8 theres DOF problems if you dont focus it right. You can incrase your ISO to help, but then you'd get more noise than usual. If it was a still subject wouldnt be as bad a problem, but moving subject changes the playing field. -Karl Blessing
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b00 Mostly Lurking 10 posts Joined Jan 2005 More info | I think the 85mm f1.8 I found (on ebay..) for $320 might be a nice route to go. little better than the 18-55mm that it came with, and will get a little closer to the action. Might pick up a 70-300mm sigma lens for outdoor events (cubs games!) but i think the 85mm one will get close enough to any action indoors and still give a good f-stop without breaking the bank. Now all I need is a camera bag and i'll have a nice little setup.
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