09-04-2013 02:30 PM
Will the phase detect 19 point AF system in the 70D track subjects moving toward the camera at 100 miles per hour in AI Server mode? In other words, is the 70D usable for still photos of aircraft in flight, horse racing and automobile racing? Any references to articles on the 70D AF sustem that discuss its ability to track subjects moving toward the camera would be appreciated. Thanks.
Bill
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09-04-2013 09:12 PM
If it's better than the 7D it won't be by much from what I've read but I haven't put any effort in that either. I have shot Radio Control events with a 7D with very good results & that's harder than full scale. I've also shot car racing with a 40D & had a pretty good keeper rate.
05-19-2014 08:21 AM
Printer?
Picasa's only big problem is, it isn't Lightroom 5!
05-19-2014 10:24 AM
Different people have different needs but I've never found a use for Lightroom. I do most of my editing with Picasa but when it doesn't do what I need then I use Photoshop (currently CS 6). As for having your images hijacked there is no way to prevent it other than not to upload them, however the next best protection is to upload at a resolution which just works on a monitor screen but is too small of a file to print well at anything larger than 4 X 6. A watermark in the important part of the image works too but it also turns viewers off if you intend to share to an audience like I do with the R/C community or my travel forum members.
As for printing I assume you're looking for a good service to do it vs at home so I'm no help there because I'm in Canada & print at home & have since the 80's. If you did want to do it at home research both Canon & Epson printers. I've been getting great images with Epson but one of the biggest reasons is that I have calibrated my monitor to match what the printer outputs & I've learned to use Epson papers & the correct ICC profiles. If I had bought a Canon printer I'd be using Canon paper. Every brand of paper absorbs ink differently resulting in different looking prints because the printer won't be calibrated for the off brand paper unless you install & use the appropriate ICC profile.
05-19-2014 10:25 PM
Thanks Cicopo: I took some shots of Osprey to Sam's Club where they print with Epson printers. I printed 3 @ 8x10 and one @ 12x16. results were disappointing, highr contrast than on screen and the colors wer significantly darker. It was a total waste.
After years of paying crazy prices for inkjet cartridges, and calculating the cost of paper and ink, I decided to let someone else do the printing. You can get a service to print for about the same cost as the materials, only problem is quality. I guess if you do your own printing, you can tweak the settings until it meets your criteria. I was just hoping to turn at least one aspect of the process over to someone else. Is that a misguided dream? where do the pros who don't do their own printing have it done?
With High Regards,
Garry
05-19-2014 10:29 PM - edited 05-19-2014 10:30 PM
They go to a professional photo printing business. Here in Seattle we have a half dozen businesses that serve the photo and graphic arts community. Figure pricing appropriate for commercial work.
05-20-2014 09:40 AM
I am retired now and I do all my own printing. I have three photo printers. A Pixma Pro 9500 II, a Pixma Pro 100 and a
HP D 7620. Years ago when I was in film, I had my own color dakroom. If you pay for custom printing from outside sources, the cost is not as different. High quality costs! It's just a fact of life.
When you are doing the micro focus adjustments, you are using a tripod and a focus test target? In this case IS should be off.
Anythime you are on a tripod, IS is off. All the rest of the time it is on. IS doesn't stop blur or movement form the subject. It stops blur and camera shake from you.
BTW, never go to Sam's or Walmart for printing. When I do use a commerical printing service I use a local company or WHCC.
05-21-2014 07:55 PM
It sounds like your monitor isn't calibrated relative to the print service, which is VERY common. If you send me a PM I can link you to 2 test files that you can download & have printed. Once they are printed you will need to adjust your monitors brightness & colours as accuractely as your eyes can to the prints & that's the settings you use for future editing. As long as you use the same printing service things should always match after that.
05-21-2014 09:09 PM - edited 05-21-2014 09:21 PM
cicopo, With all due respect to your knowledge and experience, it is impossible to calibrate for a store printer. You can get closer and even much better results but you simply can't match color using inkjet technology. If you could work with the technican to calibrate on the spot, pulling print after print until you were satisfied, you might get what you want.
I just mention this because color matching can be extremely difficult. The camera has the capacity to capture more color than printers are capable of producing. The process is made more complicated because the photographer moves from an additive color system (a monitor) to a reflective color system (a paper print) which requires a very big adjustment in visual perception.
The printing service will find that there are even seasonal changes in the printer's performance. Heat, cold, and humidity will have significant impact on inkjet performance. Paper is like a living thing, absorbing and releasing moisture from the air. The best printing companies operate their inkjet printers in a climate controled environment. Printers are given fair latitude to deliver an "acceptable" product under lenient legal guidelines within which they operate.
Just my $.02.
Edited to add, I don't want to sound unreasonable because printing services, by and large, can produce very pleasing results. Pleasing color, of course, is not the same as matching color.
05-22-2014 08:27 AM
I agree that you can't get it right on but you can get a whole lot closer using my recommended idea. You will need to use the same place for your prints later but IF you consider just how few people understand just how important it is to edit at the same brightness level their printer outputs. Editing on ANY monitor at it's maximum brightness is WRONG, but very common. If you want to have stuff printed where you have no control you at least need to take some time to analize whether you are giving them bad files or they are just doing poor work. By giving them files designed to print at a correct brightness & which have just about every colour & shade of colour it will show whether or not the printing service is up to par.
05-22-2014 09:48 AM
The most important things to get right on your monitor are brightness, contrast and gray-scale. It is not possibile to match every single color but you can match a single color. It is actually no different than it was in the darkroom. And a most often overlooked setting is paper. Hold a sheet of paper up to your monitor with just a white screen displaying (from PS or whatever post processor you use) and see if they match. If they aren't the same white, ther is no need to go further as it will be impossibile.
Service like WHCC can and do provide 'custom' professional printing. It is not cheap neither is home printing but the results are worth it if you want the best. Sadly, or happily, most people are satified with Sam's or Walmart.
When I print an 8x10 for a cilent, I never give them the first print. It is simply the cost of printing. Make your adjustments, (in PS) print and make the tweaking adjustments (again in PS) and re-print. It's all what you are satified with.
05-22-2014 10:05 AM - edited 05-22-2014 10:20 AM
I appreciate the follow up to my earlier comments. I wanted to add that like the white balance setting a camera uses to adjust for different lighting conditions, printing paper and their cooresponding inks are design to be viewed under certain conditions. If one views paper whiteness in a dark room or under florescent lights, the viewer's perception of that color will be different than if viewed under controlled conditions such as found in a 5000K light booth. The transparent printing ink filters light reflected off the paper, therefore unless the print is viewed under light similar to that which the monitor was calibrated to match, the print will not reflect (literally!) an accurate representation of the calibration process.
Of course, viewing paper or a test print in the bright, sunlight, conditions of a 5000K color adjusted light while working on a monitor, that is best viewed in a darkened room, is extremely difficult and for these reasons color calibration hardware and professional quality monitors are popular in the professional color reproduction industry.
Edited to add: I should clarify, for those knowledgeable or seeking more knowledge, that my earlier post used the term "reflective" to describe the color system that printing entails. This is not entirely accurate and should have been described as a "subtractive color system". The ink on paper acts as a filter which "subtracts" certain colors from the visual spectrum allowing only the shade of each color in a spectrum of white to be transfer back to the viewer.
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