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FORUMS Community Talk, Chatter & Stuff General Photography Talk 
Thread started 30 Mar 2010 (Tuesday) 14:22
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Shooting birds ?

 
Tony007
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Mar 30, 2010 14:22 |  #1

There was a question posed by a gentleman who setup his camera, used a 70-200mm L lens and tried to shoot bird that came to a feeded. I did the same thing, used Tv setting, ss about 200 iso of around 100-200 and my images came out like crap. Blurry, out of focus, etc. Does anyone have expertise on simply shooting birds, not in flight but perhaps stationery? Thank you:confused:




  
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mike_d
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Mar 30, 2010 14:31 |  #2

Try 1/500', center point auto focus, and high enough ISO to expose properly.




  
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lettershop
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Mar 30, 2010 16:53 |  #3

A suggestion would be to download photos that you like and see if they have EXIF data, You can see focal length, shutter speed, ISO and aperture.


1DX, Gripped 60D,10-22mm, 18-135mm, 70-200mm f/2.8L IS, 24-70L, TS-E 24mm f/3.5L II, 100mm f2.8 Macro, 50mm f/1.4, 60mm 2/2.8 Macro, 580ex, 430EXII, Pocketwizards, Softbox, Tamron 1.4X TC, Canon 2x TC, GT3541LS, BH-55

  
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sixsixfour
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Mar 30, 2010 17:24 |  #4

what camera are you using?

if you are using any of the rebel series of cameras or the xxD (i.e. 40D, 50D), I would set AI Servo, select center point and do shutter speeds of around 1/500~up at around maybe ISO400.


Canon 7D / 50D / 30D / SL1 / XT

My photography-related addiction makes a crack habit look like a fiscally responsible pasttime.

  
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Digital_zen
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Mar 31, 2010 09:58 |  #5

Middle finger up, the rest down, though you should know, this is considered rude by most. Also reading and learning as much as possible about your subject(s) is always a good idea. A few things that I have learned about birds are that if seem to be heading straight toward them they fly off, if you use a zig zag pattern of walking/crawling and avoid eye contact they seem to ignore you more. Also if you seem smaller than them, they stay better, and birds are creatures of habit and will often revisit the same spot over and over on the way to and from their nest, so that they are "harder to follow" directly to their nest, and get a chance to check for danger.
Just keep in mind that when you are shooting something (especially living) it is important to know as much about what you're shooting as how to shoot it.


You will find no more zen at the top of a mountain, than the zen that you bring there with you.

~zen proverb~

  
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Snydremark
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Mar 31, 2010 10:06 as a reply to  @ Digital_zen's post |  #6

Do you have any pics you could post for us to look at? Were you using a tripod? If yes, is your lens an IS version? If so, was IS turned off? Did your AF switch get bumped to manual?


- Eric S.: My Birds/Wildlife (external link) (R5, RF 800 f/11, Canon 16-35 F/4 MkII, Canon 24-105L f/4 IS, Canon 70-200L f/2.8 IS MkII, Canon 100-400L f/4.5-5.6 IS I/II)
"The easiest way to improve your photos is to adjust the loose nut between the shutter release and the ground."

  
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Shooting birds ?
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