Here's one I took at the end of last year, capturing a little bit of movement.
ISO 200, 1/125, f4
Having read up on this and snooped a load of photos on Flickr it would appear you want a quick shutter speed and a wide open aperture, will give you something like this:
Not taken by me:
More shots on Flickr.
Having read up on this and snooped a load of photos on Flickr it would appear you want a quick shutter speed and a wide open aperture, will give you something like this:
Yes if you want to freeze the action eg a jump shot but the downside is a reduction in depth of field and no sense of movement so better not to use those settings for anything other than head on jump shots I'd say.
I agree, but if you want some guaranteed keepers then I'd stick to this setting for at least some of the time that you're shooting?
aim for f2.8 or f3.5 if possible, to create DOF.
Here's one I took at the end of last year, capturing a little bit of movement.
ISO 200, 1/125, f4
Right, been asked to take some cross country jumping pics at the weekend, as I am in between cameras at the moment I have borrowed my mates 450D with 55-250is lens.
Its not a fast lens, but hopefully it will be a nice bright day!
Any recomendations for shutter speed/ISO etc?
Cheers!
In fact I did it - and who said there are any rules regarding clips - I don't see anything wrong with it.
Fab pics...right up my street!
Got to say tho, whoever did that clip needs some lessons lol!
f2.8 creates DoF?
My lens must be on the wrong way round :dapprove:
Surely all lens create dof, the lower the f number, the smaller or narrower the dof