Playing around

maxalmon

New member
This week I've been trying to capture xenia without image blurr, what a royal PIA....anyway this is my latest attempt. kicked up the iso, not happy with image quality
fullpic1.jpg
 
I see particles in the water but I don't see noise...even in the darkest of regions. Of course I could be confusing the two but I doubt it. Your ISO was only 500 and on a D700 you shouldn't be able to see it anyway. The image looks sharp with interesting lighting and I would be happy with it.
 
Just curious Titus, what settings would you have shot this at?

I'm still venturing into the manual areana, but shot this in P mode.

Guess I should have been more precise, wasn't the grain that's bothering me, just that for some reason the image just doesn't look "right" colors are washed, can't get the bottomhalf of the image into focus. If I adjust the fstop for more DOF, then I have issues with the xenia blurr.

FTS are my goal this month, I thought macro was hard, this is a whole new learning curve
 
nice shot :)
try an aperture of 2.8. that will allow more light into the photo which will allow you to use an even faster shutter speed in order to catch the xenia in mid pulse.
since your apature was at like 5.6 and shutter speed was like 1/125 sec

let me know if that helps :)
good luck and happy shooting :)
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14039320#post14039320 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by vitaldefect
nice shot :)
try an aperture of 2.8. that will allow more light into the photo which will allow you to use an even faster shutter speed in order to catch the xenia in mid pulse.
since your apature was at like 5.6 and shutter speed was like 1/125 sec

let me know if that helps :)
good luck and happy shooting :)
He wont want to go with 2.8 as that will give him even less DOF.
 
Well I can't outright tell you what settings I would use. I would have to have my camera and tripod in your house looking at your tank under your lights. After all that, the settings I would use with my camera would still be a little different than what I would use with yours. I can however help you find out for yourself what I would do in your shoes. That D700 you have is some fancy piece of equipment, a true DSLR in the greatest sense of the word, so thankfully we have a lot to work with. This should be easy as pie.

You are looking for wide depth of field. There are several factors which influence it:
Focal length: 25mm has more DOF than 65mm
Distance from subject: 10 feet has more DOF than 5 feet
Aperture: f/12 has more DOF than f/4

Exposure is a triangle:
Shutter Speed (motion blur)
Aperture (DOF)
ISO (sensitivity to light)

I always recommend starting at ISO 100. Decide what your priority is between shutter speed (movement) or Aperture (DOF). In this case you have specific requirements for both, which makes full manual mode the only mode to go with. If you can't achieve the desired Shutter Speed and Aperture with ISO 100, then and only then do you move the ISO up.

Your D700 is VERY helpful here. I mean my god, you can go all the way out to ISO 25,600 if you REALLY have to. I'm not saying I would ever use ISO 25,600 with a D700 in real life...but the option is there. Compared to most other cameras on the market, the noise levels at lower ISO speeds are exceptional with this one. The D700 fairs better than the origional 5D in this area, which is no feat to scoff at.
My point is, from what I have seen on paper, I would use ISO 800 with a D700 without a 2nd thought. I would probably use ISO 1600 very liberally. You have one heck of a piece of equipment and you should take advantage of it.

Now you can set your ISO to 25,600 and your aperture to f/32 and take pictures like a newbie. You spent a lot of money on this stuff and you should make it sing like the well tuned instrument it is. If you want to squeeze every bit of perfection out of this camera (using both the lowest ISO speed and widest aperture you can get away with), check out this website and use it like I tell you:
http://www.dofmaster.com/dofjs.html

1) Figure out the exact range of DOF you need (the width of your tank front to back)
2) Measure how far away you will be when shooting *from the focus point in your tank* .
3) Input the distance from the focus point into the website
4) Input the focal length of your lens into the website (65mm)
5) Adjust the aperture on the website until the DOF range matches your tank from the front of the glass to the back wall...then go a little bit more for good measure

*When you focus on a subject, DOF isn't an even half and half split. 1/3 of the DOF will be between the lens and the point focused on. 2/3 of the DOF will be behind the point focused on.*
Basically you need to look at your tank from the side. Measure the depth of the tank in 3rds. At the 1/3 mark, find something to focus on such as a patch of zoas or whatever is in that region of the tank.

Now you know what aperture you need to have every organism in the tank in crisp focus from the measurements you just took. Set your camera to "M" mode and select that aperture. Lets say it came out to f/10. You know what shutter speed you need to freeze the corals and/or fish from trial and error. Lets say it came out to 1/125.

So your aperture is f/10 and your shutter speed is 1/125 but your exposure meter and live histogram are screaming that the picture is too dark. Now (notice this is the last step) bump up your ISO speed to wherever it has to be in order to make everything kosher. If you have to go all the way to ISO 3200, try it and see how it goes. If the image is too grainy for your taste, sacrifice some shutter speed and patiently wait for everything to stop moving so fast. You could play with your distance from the focus point and/or focal length of the lens in order to use a wider aperture without changing the DOF as another method of bringing the ISO down. There is more than one way to skin a cat. Be creative.

Lets see your results!! =)
 
Last edited:
Titus, Thanks!.....I'll spend most of today experimenting with the information you provided and I'll post progress with the settings/images thru the day.

OT...I've played around with the iso from 6400 to 25k and I will admitt that I was stunned with image quality, I'll be taking CS3 & photography classes at the local CC end of Jan
 
I've found ISO 6400 remarkably useable on my camera as well. In the past, ISO 1600 was practically useless, but now sensors can really crank up the light sensitivity without too much noise. While I have not experimented with it myself, shooting in RAW and applying noise ninja would probably do wonders for our ISO 6400 shots.
 
I was playing around with iso6500, it was pitch black in the backyard, I couldn't see anything, yet the sensors were able to make the image look like it was taken before sunset, you could see everything in the backyard..
 
That was lastnights playtime...

Decided to do a little aqua-staging and added a few pieces for the shot.

full manual
iso3200
f11
1/125
DSC_17961.jpg
 
So you did this before you read my little review? Everything looks pretty good to me. Lets check out a 100% crop of the image. If it is a little blurry, especially the xina, than an extra 1/3 or 1/2 stop of shutter speed may work wonders.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14043139#post14043139 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by TitusvileSurfer
So you did this before you read my little review? Everything looks pretty good to me. Lets check out a 100% crop of the image. If it is a little blurry, especially the xina, than an extra 1/3 or 1/2 stop of shutter speed may work wonders.
I read your review and followed directions, but altered them slightly as the image was very dark

When you say 100% crop, do you mean a full shot thats not cropped?

I did a full series of shots with bracketed f/SS/iso, I'll post the images in a single post a little later...
 
No it should be what the image looks like when viewed at full size.
Squirrel eating some seeds in my back yard
_MG_0746.jpg

100% crop, showing the image "zoomed in" all the way.
_MG_0746100.jpg
 
These are a series of bracketed images, switched from the Sigma24-70 to the Nikon 105 macro for these images. The only editing was to crop and unsharp 20

iso 1000 f13 1/125 +3EC
test131.jpg



iso 1000 f11 1/125 +3EC
test11.jpg



iso 1000 f10 1/125 +3EC
test10.jpg


iso 1000 f9 1/125 +3EC
test9.jpg



iso 1000 f8 1/125 +3EC
test8.jpg



iso 1000 f7.1 1/125 +3EC
test71.jpg



Final image is a 100% crop, focus is way off IMO
100.jpg
 
You never want to bracket with aperture. bracketing with shutter speed is usually preferred, but when you are already at the minimum needed shutter speed, bracket ISO instead. You should never bracket aperture unless you are testing DOF just to see the real world difference. Using the 100% crop, you can see need for further improvement. I think you are off to a fine start myself though. I also don't understand the "+3EC". If that means exposure compensation, then it should change every frame. It looks like EC is going from -2/3, -1/3, 0, +1/3, +2/3, +1
 
Last edited:
Back
Top