Give yourself and the camera some time you will eventually have the D500 shooting how you like to shoot. Congratulations I'm happy you picked the D500 as it is directly descended from the D300. I'm sure that once you get to know it you will be so glad you went the way you did.
Thanks a bunch.
I noticed I was under exposing pretty much off the bat. I admit I was a bit discouraged because I could be underexposing images for half of what I just spent.I went through all of the menu items today and played with the tracking some. I really like the layout of the buttons and the great viewfinder. I also noticed it finds focus much easier than the D300.
Thanks for the encouragement. I have yet another learning curve to climb.
When I look at the histogram of the shot above, I see pretty much exactly what I would expect knowing you used Spot metering. The shot was metered for middle grey based on what was immediately under the focus-point while entirely ignoring anything and everything else in the frame. Remember: It's not the job of the meter to give you the exposure you WANT; that's your job as the photographer. The job of the meter is to give you a consistent, baseline of exposure, based on middle grey, which you use a springboard to dial in the exact exposure you want. Learn to think in "middle grey", because that's how the meter "thinks" for every... single... shot... and in every metering mode (with the exception of Matrix which is a little more complicated). Once you learn to think like the meter does, (middle grey, middle grey, middle grey) your ability to expose a scene the way YOU want it exposed, will improve dramatically.Thanks a bunch.
I noticed I was under exposing pretty much off the bat. I admit I was a bit discouraged because I could be underexposing images for half of what I just spent.I went through all of the menu items today and played with the tracking some. I really like the layout of the buttons and the great viewfinder. I also noticed it finds focus much easier than the D300.
Thanks for the encouragement. I have yet another learning curve to climb.
When I look at the histogram of the shot above, I see pretty much exactly what I would expect knowing you used Spot metering. The shot was metered for middle grey based on what was immediately under the focus-point while entirely ignoring anything and everything else in the frame. Remember: It's not the job of the meter to give you the exposure you WANT; that's your job as the photographer. The job of the meter is to give you a consistent, baseline of exposure, based on middle grey, which you use a springboard to dial in the exact exposure you want. Learn to think in "middle grey", because that's how the meter "thinks" for every... single... shot... and in every metering mode (with the exception of Matrix which is a little more complicated). Once you learn to think like the meter does, (middle grey, middle grey, middle grey) your ability to expose a scene the way YOU want it exposed, will improve dramatically.
Well, I will probably shut down my 365 thread and start posting here. For whatever reason, I am not consistently getting what I think are satisfactory images. I am looking at some AF fine tuning software to see if maybe that is all I need to get the images sharp. I dunno. Since I haven't been feeling all that well, I haven't really tried to set-up a controlled test of my AF with each lens. I am hoping to have some time this week to set-up some comparison shots using a tripod.
View attachment 259199
A fine dog portrait!
Regarding getting sharp focus... Are you using Group-Area AF, by any chance? Have you tried turning of VR, assuming you do in fact use it, and lastly... Have you tried using Quiet Shutter Mode? I find using Quiet Shutter Mode really does make a difference in the overall sharpness of my shots.Well, I will probably shut down my 365 thread and start posting here. For whatever reason, I am not consistently getting what I think are satisfactory images. I am looking at some AF fine tuning software to see if maybe that is all I need to get the images sharp. I dunno. Since I haven't been feeling all that well, I haven't really tried to set-up a controlled test of my AF with each lens. I am hoping to have some time this week to set-up some comparison shots using a tripod.
Thanks.I just noticed you have acquired a D500, congratulations.
In regards to your focus challenge. Dropbox me an image ([email protected]) that you feel is almost there, but just seems shy of what you expect. I would like to take a look at it if you don't mind.