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Photography Q&A
ultra sharp wildlife pics
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<blockquote data-quote="Woodyg3" data-source="post: 735860" data-attributes="member: 24569"><p>I'll just add 2 cents worth here and say that the shot Fred worked on and uploaded looks like subject blur rather than focus. I know you are having worries about noise, but shutter speed needs to be high enough to prevent subject blur, and this is especially true with newer, higher resolution cameras. There are many ways to improve noise in post processing, but subject blur can never really be corrected to get results that come with a good exposure in the first place.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Woodyg3, post: 735860, member: 24569"] I'll just add 2 cents worth here and say that the shot Fred worked on and uploaded looks like subject blur rather than focus. I know you are having worries about noise, but shutter speed needs to be high enough to prevent subject blur, and this is especially true with newer, higher resolution cameras. There are many ways to improve noise in post processing, but subject blur can never really be corrected to get results that come with a good exposure in the first place. [/QUOTE]
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