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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5300
Nikon D5300 question
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<blockquote data-quote="nickt" data-source="post: 456043" data-attributes="member: 4923"><p><strong>Re: Nikon 5300 question</strong></p><p></p><p>More thoughts.... </p><p>I'm assuming you are using this lens on a tripod so you can go fairly low on shutter speed without getting camera shake. Even on a tripod though, at some point, too slow of a shutter speed is going to blur things due to wind or animal movement. So ISO (light sensitivity) will need to increase to be able to let you keep that shutter speed at the minimum that YOU determine for a stable image. Raising that iso will give you more noise in your image. Some of that can be fixed in post processing.</p><p>If you are hand holding, things will be harder. Recommended hand held shutter speed is 1/focal length to not show camera shake. This will need a pretty high iso which will make for a much grainier picture.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nickt, post: 456043, member: 4923"] [b]Re: Nikon 5300 question[/b] More thoughts.... I'm assuming you are using this lens on a tripod so you can go fairly low on shutter speed without getting camera shake. Even on a tripod though, at some point, too slow of a shutter speed is going to blur things due to wind or animal movement. So ISO (light sensitivity) will need to increase to be able to let you keep that shutter speed at the minimum that YOU determine for a stable image. Raising that iso will give you more noise in your image. Some of that can be fixed in post processing. If you are hand holding, things will be harder. Recommended hand held shutter speed is 1/focal length to not show camera shake. This will need a pretty high iso which will make for a much grainier picture. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5300
Nikon D5300 question
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