Davesrose
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2006
- Posts
- 5,716
- Likes
- 451
?? Name one what??Name one.
?? Name one what??Name one.
Some folks do that so that they don't have to change lenses (that does add up on costWalking around local wildlife parks and nature places some serious photographers have two or three DSLR's set up for quick action. Looks expensive though.
You're just being ridiculous. I have provided many examples of why RAW is used, and how it and dedicated cameras are tools used by professionals. No point trying to engage with you.I don't judge images by numbers. I make them using the tools at hand.
Some folks do that so that they don't have to change lenses (that does add up on cost)
But you have different lenses you can’t find with a smart phone or point and shoot. Fisheyes, wider or longer, tilt/shift for architecture.Yes it's one drawback of DSLR's, changing lenses for different shots.
But you have different lenses you can’t find with a smart phone or point and shoot. Fisheyes, wider or longer, tilt/shift for architecture.
Yes, I have Canon lenses that are now 20 years old (and if I had had their EOS film cameras, could still be using EF lenses over 30 years old). Nature photographers might have a shorter lens in case there's something that will be closer by, vs a long one if there's a bird in the air (and they could also have cameras set to different settings for focusing and shooting one frame, vs burst photos with AI tracking for a bird).Hence carrying two or more. And once you've bought them they should last years.
Yes, I have Canon lenses that are now 20 years old (and if I had had their EOS film cameras, could still be using EF lenses over 30 years old). Nature photographers might have a shorter lens in case there's something that will be closer by, vs a long one if there's a bird in the air (and they could also have cameras set to different settings for focusing and shooting one frame, vs burst photos with AI tracking for a bird).
If you look at sports, photographers might have several cameras they switch to....or now with wifi, they also can shoot remotely (either stills or movies).
I meant current DSLRs/mirrorless. They have apps for your phone or tablet so that you can shoot them remotely.Is that with drones? I've seen some great aerial videos on Youtube of ancient sites and stately homes and buildings. Like King Alfred's Tower.
Once out of how many times?at least he admits when he's wrong
Well of course, why on earth would I admit I’m wrong when I’m falsely “called out”? And while we’re on the subject, please provide some evidence of all these “countless times” when it wasn’t just some troll falsely calling me out!unlike you, the countless times you've been called on the pathetically, ridculously stupid incorrect things you say.
I don't know how people can visualize using three completely different setups at once. They must be letting the equipment dictate the picture they shoot.
Yeah, it's not "all at once". They have some basic exposure settings set the same, cameras with the same interface, and they switch to a camera one at a time (it's just they're trying to save time not exchanging lenses and changing their AF and/or shooting mode).To be fair it was for animals I saw someone with three.