Exactly what I was thinking as well, except I think the whole fish in pic #3 is slightly out of focus, not just the eye.k, the first two are spot on techincally. Sharp, nice color, good exposure. The 3rd is a tad soft in the eye (of course that could just be my eyes....) and the 4th appears to have some sort of glare type reflection on the glass (or a streak or something).
Meaning it isnt "sharp", it's soft. The lines are a little blurry, it's out of focus just slightly.Thanks for the feedback, when you say that the third one is soft what do you mean by that?
Manually focusing literally means turning the focus ring on your lens to track your fish. I noticed you are using a 28-135mm lens so auto focus speed and speed leave a little to be desired. By manual focusing you can make up for slow auto focus, but it takes a lot of practice and hand eye coordination. The first two were pleasing and sharp enough for casual observation, but I agree they weren't sharp enough when it comes down to being critical.The one question I have for you is how would I be able to manually focus with the fish moving so fast?
I noticed you are using a 28-135mm
In that case, they're all excellent. :lol:
Thanks for all the feedback everyone, I would like to know the reason that doug doesnt like the 28-135? I actually have been reading up on the canon EF 100mm f/2.8L Macro IS USM Lens, and would like to get some feedback on this lens from anyone that has one or has used one.