On
a recent trip to Iceland and Svalbard I had several
opportunities to shoot birds in flight (BIF) with the FZ1000.
I rate the FZ
1000 as the most versatile single piece of photographic equipment (no need to
change lenses or add accessory equipment) ever produced. One of its
capabilities is BIFs as shown by the pictures here.
However I should warn newcomers to BIF work that the
keeper rate is extremely low with any kind of equipment. If I get 5 out of 100
frames clear and sharp I am well enough pleased. A single BIF session could easily involve several
hundred frames.
I rate BIF as probably the most difficult photographic
challenge for any camera and its operator.
In the majority of my shots the bird is not in the
frame or is unsharp for various reasons, including camera shake and
not-quite-in-focus or completely out of focus.
With the FZ1000 I set Quality to JPG Fine for long bursts with fast buffer clearing.
S on the main Mode Dial.
AF Mode 1 Area with the AF box central and default
size or larger if plain sky is the background.
Burst Mode M gives about 5 fps with AF and EVF preview
on each frame.
I have i-Dynamic on Auto to reduce the risk of blown
highlights.
i-Zoom is ON.
I generally try for a focal length of E400-600mm. The
camera will go to E800mm with i-Zoom but I find it extremely difficult to keep
flying birds in frame at the longer focal lengths. Any longer focal length (for instance with
Ext-Opt-Zoom + i-Zoom) sees a serious drop in quality.
Shutter speeds need to be fast to combat both camera
and subject movement. I find around 1/800 sec is generally satisfactory but if light
levels permit, faster is better.
In post capture I almost always need to crop
substantially. Fortunately the FZ1000 has 20 Mpx to start with so cropping down
even to 5 Mpx can produce quite acceptable results.
Brunnichs Guillemot. Difficult to photograph from a boat. They are only 40cm long and fly fast. |
Excellent work Andrew!
ReplyDeleteI've just bought an FZ1000. Great work, and thanks for the set up advice.
ReplyDeleteThanks. The FZ1000 is in the sights for the same reason and to shoot birds and landscape while walking in the bush and outback. I wonder whether Post Focus can be retro added in firmware.
ReplyDeleteThank you, excellent. I have just bought a fz1000
ReplyDeleteHi Andrew, many thanks for your excellent coverage of the FZ1000. Currently I use an OMD E M1 with the 50-200mm f2.8-3.5 SWD lens. I shoot a lot of motorsport being an accredited photographer at Brands Hatch. I do get good results from the E M1 see link to my Flickr site: www.flickr.com/photos/motorsportaction However I am finding at age 72 even the Olympus set up is becoming heavy ( I changed from Canon 7D with Tamron 150-600mm which was just too cumbersome) I also prefer the ''all in one'' zoom range of the FZ1000 as I am reluctant to change lenses at the track. How do you think the FZ would perform in this environment?
ReplyDeleteMany thanks Rod.