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Pictures blurry. Shooting on a tripod, shutter button remote at fast shutter speed. Any ideas?

russellterrell
Apprentice
 
5 REPLIES 5

Stephen
Moderator
Moderator

Hi russellterrell!

 

Welcome to the Canon Forums and thank you for your post!


So that the Community can help you better, we will need to know exactly what Canon equipment you're using, including the camera body, lens, and flash if any, we'll also need to know the mode you're using to take your photos (AUTO, P, Tv, Av, Manual), and the other settings you're using including your ISO, aperture value, exact shutter speed and focus mode on your lens.

Any other details you'd like to give will only help the Community better understand your issue!

If this is an urgent support need, please CLICK HERE to reach our friendly Technical Support Team by phone or email.

Thanks and have a great day!

Hrethric
Apprentice
If the lens has IS, have you turned it off? If IS is on and the camera is mounted to a tripod, often times the IS tries to compensate for non-existent motion.

Peter
Authority
Authority
Upload a picture from the camera. We can read all your settings from the EXIF of the image.

TCampbell
Elite
Elite

My first "guess" is that your camera locked focus on something OTHER than your intended subject.  But without seeing an example photo (we'd prefer a photo with all of the camera's embedded meta-data, which tells us what camera settings were used when the shot was taken, still intact.) there's no way to be sure.

 

What camera were you using?

Was the auto-focus mode on the lens enabled?

What focus mode was the camera using (One Shot, AI Servo, etc.)

Which focus point was the camera using (did you allow it to auto-select it's own AF point or did you control which point was used?)

 

Can you post an example photo?

 

Tim Campbell
5D III, 5D IV, 60Da

ebiggs1
Legend
Legend

"If IS is on and the camera is mounted to a tripod, often times the IS tries to compensate for non-existent motion."

 

This is unlikely but a slight possibly.  The better answer is Tim's suggestion of missed focus.  Assuming you are focused on a certain point but not actually, is a pretty common mistake.

EB
EOS 1DX and 1D Mk IV and less lenses then before!
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