Oct 19, 2007, 00:02
I was like a kid in a candy store when my boss walked into my office with a nice black glossy box with 1D written on the side of it yesterday!
I'd already downloaded the PDF user manual a week ago and read a lot of it, so I put the manual to one side, threw the battery on charge and plugged the camera into the AC adaptor to use it on AC until the battery finished charging. Took a few test shots around the office - nothing spectacular, but wow... this thing means business. It gives a new meaning to the words "fast" and "responsive" when talking about cameras.
After coming from using a 30D, I find the controls very comfortably laid out and natural to use. There is still a big learning curve, but if you are familiar with a 5D/30D/40D/400D then you should be fairly confident with most of the basics.
Anyway, as soon as the battery was charged I was out the door looking for something to shoot.
I work just around the corner from Perry Lakes reserve, so I went there to take some test shots.
The amount of wildlife that was around the lake was amazing. I've been down there a few times and there are always plenty of birds (mainly millions of white cockatoos and pink and grey galahs), but I was really surprised by the variety I saw there yesterday. Maybe it was just because I was looking for photos and so was paying much closer attention.
I put my 70-200 f/2.8L IS lens on the camera and took a 1.4x TC in my pocket. Within 1/2 hour I'd filled up a 4Gb CF card and only walked about 100m from where I'd started. So I headed back to work to finish my day's work. After work I came back to the same place for another 1/2 hour of shots on my way home. All up I got photos of white cockatoos, pink and grey galahs, rosellas, wood ducks, shelducks, pacific black ducks, a sacred ibis, black winged stilts, dusky moorehens, crows, a little black cormorant, turtles, and a big carp (not a typo! ).
1. A white cockatoo landing.
2. The same bird having a drink.
3. Some black winged stilts flying (note the turtle sunbaking in the bottom right).
4. Some turtles swimming around in the shallows.
5. A sacred ibis shot through the reeds.
6. A pacific black duck having a wash.
7. A large fish (2.5ft long) which I assume to be a carp, swimming past a turtle climbing out of the water.
8. A white cockatoo sitting in a tree.
I couldn't have asked for a better opportunity to take some test shots than this, and to think it was just around the corner from my office. It's great to see such a variety of creatures thriving in a lake surrounded by suburbia. We (as humans) haven't quite managed to kill everything yet!
Oh yeah, and the camera was amazing too! These little images don't do justice to the detail captured.
I'd already downloaded the PDF user manual a week ago and read a lot of it, so I put the manual to one side, threw the battery on charge and plugged the camera into the AC adaptor to use it on AC until the battery finished charging. Took a few test shots around the office - nothing spectacular, but wow... this thing means business. It gives a new meaning to the words "fast" and "responsive" when talking about cameras.
After coming from using a 30D, I find the controls very comfortably laid out and natural to use. There is still a big learning curve, but if you are familiar with a 5D/30D/40D/400D then you should be fairly confident with most of the basics.
Anyway, as soon as the battery was charged I was out the door looking for something to shoot.
I work just around the corner from Perry Lakes reserve, so I went there to take some test shots.
The amount of wildlife that was around the lake was amazing. I've been down there a few times and there are always plenty of birds (mainly millions of white cockatoos and pink and grey galahs), but I was really surprised by the variety I saw there yesterday. Maybe it was just because I was looking for photos and so was paying much closer attention.
I put my 70-200 f/2.8L IS lens on the camera and took a 1.4x TC in my pocket. Within 1/2 hour I'd filled up a 4Gb CF card and only walked about 100m from where I'd started. So I headed back to work to finish my day's work. After work I came back to the same place for another 1/2 hour of shots on my way home. All up I got photos of white cockatoos, pink and grey galahs, rosellas, wood ducks, shelducks, pacific black ducks, a sacred ibis, black winged stilts, dusky moorehens, crows, a little black cormorant, turtles, and a big carp (not a typo! ).
1. A white cockatoo landing.
2. The same bird having a drink.
3. Some black winged stilts flying (note the turtle sunbaking in the bottom right).
4. Some turtles swimming around in the shallows.
5. A sacred ibis shot through the reeds.
6. A pacific black duck having a wash.
7. A large fish (2.5ft long) which I assume to be a carp, swimming past a turtle climbing out of the water.
8. A white cockatoo sitting in a tree.
I couldn't have asked for a better opportunity to take some test shots than this, and to think it was just around the corner from my office. It's great to see such a variety of creatures thriving in a lake surrounded by suburbia. We (as humans) haven't quite managed to kill everything yet!
Oh yeah, and the camera was amazing too! These little images don't do justice to the detail captured.