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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
D7000 Focus issues
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<blockquote data-quote="dukatum" data-source="post: 299581" data-attributes="member: 23829"><p>I promise you the D7000 will shoot sharp images just as good as the next camera.</p><p>There are plenty of people on 500px with <a href="http://500px.com/search?q=D7000" target="_blank">sharp shots from D7000</a>, same on <a href="http://www.digitalrev.com/advanced_search?skuId=9945&cameraDisplayName=Nikon%20D7000%20DSLR%20Digital%20Camera%20Body" target="_blank">Digital Rev</a>.</p><p>Try buying a <a href="http://spyder.datacolor.com/portfolio-view/spyderlenscal/" target="_blank">Spyder Lenscal</a> to use for testing your lens focus (you can actually make these sort of things at home with rulers etc) and run a good check on all your lenses. You can use AF fine tuning on D7000 to make any corrections if needed. This should be done no matter which camera body you have to be honest.</p><p></p><p>Keep in mind you have a bunch of f/1.8 lenses. This gives you very little DOF to play with, and maybe you're just needing to not using your aperture so wide right now until you become more use to the lenses? </p><p>I remember buying my 50mm 1.8, it was my first fast lens and I walked straight into Madame Tussauds shooting wide open and thinking "WTF this lens sucks!" as I couldn't get anything sharp. A few hours and a 700 shots later I was loving the lens.</p><p></p><p>Be sure you do your test shots on non-moving objects first to satisfy your thoughts that the camera can meet your expectations. Then you know if your shots on the street and moving objects are not sharp, it's not the camera at fault.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dukatum, post: 299581, member: 23829"] I promise you the D7000 will shoot sharp images just as good as the next camera. There are plenty of people on 500px with [URL="http://500px.com/search?q=D7000"]sharp shots from D7000[/URL], same on [URL="http://www.digitalrev.com/advanced_search?skuId=9945&cameraDisplayName=Nikon%20D7000%20DSLR%20Digital%20Camera%20Body"]Digital Rev[/URL]. Try buying a [URL="http://spyder.datacolor.com/portfolio-view/spyderlenscal/"]Spyder Lenscal[/URL] to use for testing your lens focus (you can actually make these sort of things at home with rulers etc) and run a good check on all your lenses. You can use AF fine tuning on D7000 to make any corrections if needed. This should be done no matter which camera body you have to be honest. Keep in mind you have a bunch of f/1.8 lenses. This gives you very little DOF to play with, and maybe you're just needing to not using your aperture so wide right now until you become more use to the lenses? I remember buying my 50mm 1.8, it was my first fast lens and I walked straight into Madame Tussauds shooting wide open and thinking "WTF this lens sucks!" as I couldn't get anything sharp. A few hours and a 700 shots later I was loving the lens. Be sure you do your test shots on non-moving objects first to satisfy your thoughts that the camera can meet your expectations. Then you know if your shots on the street and moving objects are not sharp, it's not the camera at fault. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
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D7000 Focus issues
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