-
Jako Poolman posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Jako Poolman. Spider web 1, Chartwell AH (Jhb) October 2023
I’m not sure if this is landscape or wildlife. But it seems to fit here. Took this while testing the new 50mm Rf 1.8 lens. Loved the bokeh of the light filtering through the leaves.
Canon EOS R8, RF50mm, 1/320sec, f1.8, ISO 100
1 Comment -
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
WHAT HAPPENS TO DOF WHEN YOUR SUBJECT IS CLOSE TO THE CAMERA?
Pros and Cons of long telephoto lenses – (continuation)FIRST IMAGE:
1/1250sec – f/4 – ISO 640 – Nikon D5 – Nikon 600mm Lens
FOCUS DISTANCE: 10 metersHaving the focal plane a short distance from the image plane renders shallow DOF. Conversely, the farther the image plane i…Read More
-
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
SECOND IMAGE:
1/400 sec – f/4 – ISO 640 – Nikon D5 – Nikon 600mm Lens
FOCUS DISTANCE: 8,91 METERSFor the same focal length and same aperture setting, getting physically closer to the subject will give shallower DOF and more background bokeh. In other words, less of your subject will be sharp in focus.
-
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Let’s check out the performance of the new Fuji GFX ll mirrorless camera shooting wildlife.
-
Nicolette Pedersen posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Beaky Beauty. I have such a love and fascination for the Hornbil and have hundreds of photos of them. Just a quirky depiction of expression, colour and texture.
4 Comments -
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Watch how the Canon EOS R5 and R6 changed the wildlife and bird photography world!!
-
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Pros and Cons of long telephoto lenses – (continuation)
FIRST IMAGE – (Watch in full display for max quality)WHY IS DOF MINIMISED AT THE MAXIMUM FOCAL LENGTH OF A ZOOM/LONG LENS?
Field depth depends on four factors: aperture size, lens focal length, frame (sensor) size, and focal distance (distance to subject).
Wildlife and bird p…Read More
-
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Pros and Cons of long telephoto lenses – (continuation)
SECOND IMAGE – (Watch in full display for max quality)In this image, I have cropped the image in Lightroom to show that the subject is still sharply focused despite the extremely shallow DOF. To achieve this, it is essential to understand the impact of the chosen f/stop, the distance from…Read More
-
Bruna Mentrup posted in the group Wildlife Photography
I get many questions regarding the Pros and Cons of long telephoto lenses. To answer a few of them, please join us in these weekly discussions, where I will address as many questions from students as
possible.DO LONG LENSES NEED MORE LIGHT?
The longer your lens is, the less light hits the sensor for a given aperture opening size. Your field…Read More - Load More Posts
Media
Photos
Videos
Files
Audios
Sorry, no items found.
Groups
Wildlife Photography
Public Group
Friends
Danie Bester
@daniebester
Bruna Mentrup
@bruna







Maybe we should call it..mini wildlife. It’s a beautiful image, Jako, and it’s nice to see that you don’t miss the small things in Nature, which are also important and part of wildlife.