Recent Posts
Astrophotography with the Zeiss Batis 18mm f/2.8
Astrophotography has two technical ceilings: lens coma at wide apertures, and star trailing from the Earth’s rotation. The Zeiss Batis 18mm f/2.8 addresses the first better than most lenses at this focal length and price point. The second is addressed by the 500 rule — the maximum exposure length in seconds before stars begin to trail, calculated as 500 divided by the full-frame equivalent focal length. At 18mm, that gives approximately 27 seconds.
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Auto ISO with a Minimum Shutter Floor: RF 35mm f/1.8 IS Macro STM
Manual exposure with auto ISO is the most practical exposure mode that most photographers leave unused. The RF 35mm f/1.8 IS Macro STM — Canon’s modest, versatile nifty-enough-fifty-equivalent for the R system — is the lens where this mode earns its keep, because the lens covers such a wide range of use cases in a single shooting session that fixed manual settings cannot follow it.
The setup: set the camera to M mode, ISO to Auto, aperture to whatever the scene requires (f/4 for general use with context in the background, f/1.
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Back-Button Focus: RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM as a Daily Driver
Back-button focus separates autofocus activation from shutter release. The shutter half-press no longer engages AF. Instead, the AF-ON button on the rear of the camera acquires and holds focus. It is the single camera configuration change that most noticeably improves shooting consistency, and the RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM — the kit lens for most R5 and R6 kits — is where most photographers should learn it.
The mechanics: hold AF-ON to focus continuously on a moving subject.
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Birds in Flight: Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS on the A9 III
The Sony A9 III’s global shutter eliminates rolling shutter entirely. Every pixel is read at the same instant, not sequentially. At 120 fps continuous shooting with no blackout, the camera captures a bird in flight at intervals of 8.3 milliseconds. The FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS is the lens that makes this frame rate useful rather than theoretical — long enough to fill the frame with a subject at distance, stabilized well enough for handheld tracking.
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Close Focus Intimacy: Sony FE 50mm f/1.2 G Master
The Sony FE 50mm f/1.2 G Master focuses to 0.41 meters — 41 centimeters from the sensor plane, approximately 30 centimeters from the front element. At this distance and f/1.2, you are producing something between a portrait and a macro image: the subject’s face fills the frame from chin to hairline, and the depth of field is less than two centimeters. This is not a technique for comfortable distance. It is a technique for proximity as content.
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Compression and Separation: EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM at Distance
Telephoto compression is frequently misunderstood. It is not a property of the focal length — it is a property of the distance. A 200mm lens at ten meters produces the same perspective compression as a 50mm lens at ten meters, because compression is a function of camera-to-subject distance, not focal length. What the 200mm lens does is allow you to be at that ten-meter distance while filling the frame with a subject that would be a speck at 50mm.
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Concert Photography on APS-C: Sigma 56mm f/1.4 DC DN Contemporary
Concert photography operates under specific constraints: low and rapidly changing light, a no-flash policy in most professional venues, a subject that moves unpredictably, and typically a three-song access window before photographers are removed from the pit. The Sigma 56mm f/1.4 DC DN Contemporary — available for Fuji X-mount and Sony APS-C — is a 84mm-equivalent fast prime at a price point that does not make pit photography financially precarious if something goes wrong.
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Contre-Jour with the RF 50mm f/1.2L
Shooting directly into a light source is the fastest way to ruin a technically correct photograph and the slowest way to make a memorable one. The RF 50mm f/1.2L USM handles the contradiction better than it has any right to.
The technique is contre-jour — French for “against the day,” meaning your subject is between you and the primary light source. The light halos the subject, separates them from the background, and collapses foreground detail into silhouette or near-silhouette.
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Dual Pixel RAW Microadjustment: RF 50mm f/1.2L and the R5
Dual Pixel RAW is a Canon capture mode that records each pixel’s left and right photodiode data separately, storing approximately twice the file size of a standard RAW. The primary advertised use — bokeh shift, ghost reduction — is marginal in most practical situations. The genuinely useful application is microadjustment of the focus point in Canon’s Digital Photo Professional software after capture.
At f/1.2 on the RF 50mm, the depth of field is thin enough that a focus acquisition that lands two millimeters in front of the intended plane produces a noticeably soft result.
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Electronic Shutter at 1/8000s: Freezing Motion with the RF 85mm f/1.2L
The R5 Mark II’s electronic shutter reaches 1/64000s. In practice, 1/8000s is the useful ceiling for most fast-motion subjects — athletes, birds in flight, children running — because beyond that shutter speed, the light gathering falls off steeply and ISO requirements climb into ranges where noise management becomes the dominant concern.
At 1/8000s with the RF 85mm f/1.2L and ISO 1600 in full sun, you get a completely motion-frozen frame. A sprinter at 10 m/s travels 1.
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