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Photography Q&A
Advice for shooting without an anti-alias filter ?
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 366524" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>The lack of an AA filter should do the opposite of soften your images. That said, Geoff's and Horoscope Fish's posts are on the mark. I rarely use a monopod or tripod with my D7100, but the shutter speed recommendation and Quiet shutter mode are key with this camera. If you're shooting one frame at a time, and especially in low light, I cannot emphasize just how much a hard mirror slap can impact sharpness, and Quiet mode minimizes that to a very large extent. </p><p></p><p>High density sensors will smack you around for bad technique rather quickly - I know, I learned the hard way. Don't regret the purchase - take advantage of it. It's quite a camera and it gets as much use as my D610, and maybe even more given what I tend to shoot. Learn to give it a solid platform to shoot from and shoot away.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 366524, member: 9240"] The lack of an AA filter should do the opposite of soften your images. That said, Geoff's and Horoscope Fish's posts are on the mark. I rarely use a monopod or tripod with my D7100, but the shutter speed recommendation and Quiet shutter mode are key with this camera. If you're shooting one frame at a time, and especially in low light, I cannot emphasize just how much a hard mirror slap can impact sharpness, and Quiet mode minimizes that to a very large extent. High density sensors will smack you around for bad technique rather quickly - I know, I learned the hard way. Don't regret the purchase - take advantage of it. It's quite a camera and it gets as much use as my D610, and maybe even more given what I tend to shoot. Learn to give it a solid platform to shoot from and shoot away. [/QUOTE]
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Advice for shooting without an anti-alias filter ?
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