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Thread: growing pains...

  1. #1

    growing pains...



    So a few weeks ago I upgraded from a Rebel XSI to a 5DII, which is a lot of upgrading to do for a relative newbie and a slow learner, I know, but I really missed the wide angle view of my lenses from my film days, so I saved up for the full frame body. I haven't been able to use the new camera much yet (day job blues...), but I've had enough experience with it to know I'm doing something wrong--or at least that something of what I learned about exposure and composition with the Rebel doesn't quite translate to the 5DII. Can you help me?


    1. I'm overexposing everything. Or something. The colors and contrast of the images I took with the Rebel seem deeper and more complex. It's as though the 5DII is more light sensitive. Or something. Why have I lost so much color saturation and contrast? Why are my blue skies no longer deep blue, but pale and light? ...I'm using the same lenses...


    2. ALSO: post processing the RAW files from my Rebel seemed to make a dramatic difference for the better. Not so much with the 5DII. Most of the post-processing changes I make to the 5DII RAW files look overdone--even small revisions! I use DPP, not Photoshop, so my post-processing is pretty basic.


    3. Can you recommend a website that might help me understand the nuances of exposure better? I understand the basics, can read the histogram, and I generally use aperture or full manual modes, etc. Ideally I'd like a site that shows me examples of properly/poorly exposed/processed images, so that I know what I'm looking for in my own images. (I found the recent CC on the "Orchid" post very very helpful--thank you!!)


    4. What is the best way to resize the 5DII's large files when converting from RAW to JPEG so that I don't compromise image quality? I don't own Photoshop, so I'm relying on DPP.


    5. I now have almost nothing in the telephoto range by way of lenses! I'm wondering if the 100mm f2.8 L macro might suffice as a telephoto as well as a macro? I know ya'll love the 70-200 lenses, and I'll probably go there eventually, but I want something lighter and not so conspicuously white for now.


    No need to respond to all of these questions, of course. Thanks for any and all advice!! And I apologize for any dumb or repetitive questions--feel free to send me to other useful posts I may have missed in my search.


    Gina


    P.S. I'm most interested in the challenges of natural light photography, indoor and out, so if it helps your commentary, just know I'm not using flash at all.



  2. #2
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    Re: growing pains...



    Hello Gina,


    There could be quite a few reasons why this is happening, examples being your 5DII's default settings,settings that you may have accidentallychanged or maybe there is something wrong with your 5DII.


    First off, check your exposure compensation setting. I is designed to be changed quickly (half pressthe shutter button to engage metering and move the thumb wheel), but it can be also accidentaly changed. Maybe that is why your camera is overexposing. If this is something you would never do or already checked, please do not get offended. I am just trying to be thorough,plus, I do sometimes get over- or underexposed photos, just because I did not change the settings from my previous session orI just did accidental thumb thing [:P].


    If you still have the XSI and some time, you can conduct a more controlled test. Slap your 16-35 on the XSI and the 24-70 on your 5DII, set them to equivalent focal lenghts (eg XSI@ about 30mm and 5DII @ about 50mm) and and photograph the same object using the same exposure(shutter speed, f-stop, ISO) and white balance settings. Your depth of field may differ (different sensor size), so may the saturation (varies from body to body, not so much, though), but thephotos should be exposed similarily. It would be a good idea if you shared your results.


    I am on the clockand gotta runright now, butI will check later.


    Pete



  3. #3
    Senior Member neuroanatomist's Avatar
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    Re: growing pains...



    In addition to exposure compensation, other things to check would be the Picture Style setting you're using on the 5DII vs. the XSi, the Auto Lighting Optimizer, and your white balance settings.


    I'll also have a go at #5. The 100mm Macro is a short telephoto - on a FF body, it makes a very nice portrait lens (pretty wide aperture, sitting between the classic portrait length of 85mm and the 'head-and-shoulders' focal length of 135mm. Whether 100mm is long enough really depends on what you're trying to shoot, and what you're going to do with the shots. By that, I mean if you're shooting candids of people, etc., and are printing smallish sizes (or on-screen viewing only), with the 5DII's low noise you'll have a fair bit of cropping that you can get away with. But, if your goal is to shoot wildlife, etc., 100mm isn't going to be nearly long enough.


    Given the IQ of the other lenses in your kit (with the exception of the 18-55mm kit lens, and as a side note, you need to update your profile!), I don't think you'll be thrilled with any of the consumer zoom options (e.g. 70-300mm IS USM). I'm one of those who really likes the 70-200mm (just got my EF 70-200mm f/2.8<span style="color: red;"]L IS II last week!). But I also have the EF 200mm f/2.8<span style="color: red;"]L II, which is the longest non-white Canon L-series lens. It's very sharp (though amazingly, not sharper than the 70-200 II at 200mm, which speaks volumes about the quality of the new zoom!). It's relatively light, fast, and not terribly expensive. But, if you buy the 200mm prime now and find yourself wanting the zoom later, that may not have been money well-spent (in my case, I think it was, but that's because I picked up the 200mm f/2.8 prime used on Craigslist for &gt;40% less than the cost of a new one, and if I do decide to sell it, which is quite possible, I'll actually make a profit).


    But, again, it comes down to what you're shooting. If you are going after birds and most wildlife, 200mm will still likely not be long enough. Even my EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6<span style="color: red;"]L IS on my 7D (=640mm on your 5DII) isn't long enough sometimes.


    Good luck with your image processing issues and lens decision!


    --John

  4. #4
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    Re: growing pains...



    Hey Gina!


    Quote Originally Posted by Gina Franco
    So a few weeks ago I upgraded from a Rebel XSI to a 5DII

    Hmmm normally I would say congratz and enjoy it, but I guess that doesn't really count for you yet, so I will keep it in mind for later []


    Quote Originally Posted by Gina Franco
    but I've had enough experience with it to know I'm doing something wrong--or at least that something of what I learned about exposure and composition with the Rebel doesn't quite translate to the 5DII. Can you help me?

    Quote Originally Posted by Gina Franco
    Why have I lost so much color saturation and contrast? Why are my blue skies no longer deep blue, but pale and light? ...I'm using the same lenses...

    Hmm normally I wouldn't advice anyone to do this, but have you tried the full-auto mode? That's the one mode that has to expose correctly without you interfering it. If photos still come out badly it's easy...your 5D copy isn't functioning as it should.


    If your output in auto-mode would be correct, then there are a few more factors that might be wrong with settings. A few are already stated by piiooo. I can't really believe that you personally would be the factor that makes your pictures bad as they are now. Alright the fingerslip exposure is something that happends to me as well from to time, but that one doesn't clarify the loss of contrast and/or colors.


    Better yet, my pictures are much better straight out of the camera compared to my ex-50D.


    Could you perhaps show us some of the photos you are referring to? With Exif-details if possible.


    Quote Originally Posted by Gina Franco
    2. ALSO: post processing the RAW files from my Rebel seemed to make a dramatic difference for the better. Not so much with the 5DII. Most of the post-processing changes I make to the 5DII RAW files look overdone--even small revisions! I use DPP, not Photoshop, so my post-processing is pretty basic.

    Hmm that's weird, I found that my dynamic playrange increased with the 5D2. It almost sounds like you have auto lighting optimizer at the highest or something.


    Quote Originally Posted by Gina Franco
    5. I now have almost nothing in the telephoto range by way of lenses! I'm wondering if the 100mm f2.8 L macro might suffice as a telephoto as well as a macro? I know ya'll love the 70-200 lenses, and I'll probably go there eventually, but I want something lighter and not so conspicuously white for now.

    I'll just say the the f4 versions of the 70-200 aren't really that big and to be honest, qualitywise there aren't very good non-white alternatives. Or you should perhaps look at a Sigma or Tamron or other 3rd party brand. Also the canon 200mm L is a very nice and black lens.


    The 100mm (L or non-L) is a very nice lens, but you won't really notice the extra mm's in the "telerange". You would buy this lens mainly for macro and/or portrait.


    Hope my comment is some kind of usefull to you. I would really suggest you'd try to shoot full-auto and see what happens. Also post some photos, this could really help to give us a better idea of what you're experiencing.


    Good luck,


    Jan

  5. #5
    Senior Member btaylor's Avatar
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    Re: growing pains...



    Hi Gina,


    I'm not really in a position to give you any advice on the settings within your new 5D as I've only had mine for 4 days now. However I will say that I am getting significantly better results with the 5d MkII than my 40D - both straight out of the camera and during post processing.


    I really hope you can figure this one out as it'd be a shame for a rather expensive piece of gear to be underperforming for you. You never know, it could be the simplest of solutions that you just haven't thought about yet.


    Good luck, Ben.
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/ben_taylor_au/ www.methodicallymuddled.wordpress.com
    Canon 5D Mark III | Canon 5D Mark II | Samyang 14mm f/2.8 | Canon 35mm f/1.4L USM | Sigma 85mm f/1.4 EX DG HSM |Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II |Canon 2 x Teleconverter III | Canon 580 EX II Speedlite | Really Right Stuff TVC 34L | Really Right Stuff BH55 LR | Gorillapod Focus | Really Right Stuff BH 30

  6. #6

    Re: growing pains...



    Quote Originally Posted by piiooo


    Hello Gina,


    There could be quite a few reasons why this is happening, examples being your 5DII's default settings,settings that you may have accidentallychanged or maybe there is something wrong with your 5DII.


    First off, check your exposure compensation setting. I is designed to be changed quickly (half pressthe shutter button to engage metering and move the thumb wheel), but it can be also accidentaly changed. Maybe that is why your camera is overexposing. If this is something you would never do or already checked, please do not get offended. I am just trying to be thorough,plus, I do sometimes get over- or underexposed photos, just because I did not change the settings from my previous session orI just did accidental thumb thing [img]/emoticons/emotion-4.gif[/img].


    If you still have the XSI and some time, you can conduct a more controlled test. Slap your 16-35 on the XSI and the 24-70 on your 5DII, set them to equivalent focal lenghts (eg XSI@ about 30mm and 5DII @ about 50mm) and and photograph the same object using the same exposure(shutter speed, f-stop, ISO) and white balance settings. Your depth of field may differ (different sensor size), so may the saturation (varies from body to body, not so much, though), but thephotos should be exposed similarily. It would be a good idea if you shared your results.


    I am on the clockand gotta runright now, butI will check later.


    Pete



    <div style="clear: both;"]</div>





    Hi Pete,



    No worries about offending! I'm very grateful for your help--and I'm pretty clumsy with the camera, so accidents are entirely possible. But now that you've sent me there, I'm looking closely again at the EXIF data of some of my images, and nothing shows up in terms of exposure compensation. I'm looking through the settings again too, but I admittedly shoot everything in RAW, in default shot settings, auto white balance, and no picture styles, so that I can make those choices later in post-processing. I did that with the Rebel, too, so I do know the images come out of the camera quite flat and colorless. But as I said earlier, usually in post-processing the Rebel images the colors and contrast would really come to life.


    I don't think there's anything wrong with the 5DII camera, either. I think I'm more likely making technical mistakes. For example, I realized just now that I might be overexposing because my ISO is too high. I'll post some samples below so ya'll can see what I'm talking about, but I think that because I avoided using ISO 100 or even 200 on the Rebel (the resolution was always slightly melty at 100 if I didn't use a tripod), I got into the habit of shooting at either ISO 400 or 800. Don't ask me how that works--it seemed rather natural to me from the film days--but it's probably absurd to approach shooting with the 5DII that way.


    I'm going to take your advice, though! This weekend I'm going to take both bodies out, and I'll test them on the sky (since it's the deep blues I miss most from my new images), and see what happens. Thank you so much!


    Gina


    ***


    These images are straight out of the camera, no post-processing. I feel as though the first one should have been "pushable" in post-processing, that the blues and greens should have been easy to achieve. But this is a good example of an image that didn't change much before looking overdone. The other two are examples of over exposed images I made with the 5DII on Good Friday. You can see that the reds are still really vibrant. Red ain't a problem.


    1/400, f8, ISO 320, 24-70mm L









    1/400, f8, ISO 320, 24-70mm L









    1/400, f8, ISO 320, 24-70mm L



  7. #7

    Re: growing pains...



    Quote Originally Posted by btaylor


    Hi Gina,


    I'm not really in a position to give you any advice on the settings within your new 5D as I've only had mine for 4 days now. However I will say that I am getting significantly better results with the 5d MkII than my 40D - both straight out of the camera and during post processing.


    I really hope you can figure this one out as it'd be a shame for a rather expensive piece of gear to be underperforming for you. You never know, it could be the simplest of solutions that you just haven't thought about yet.


    Good luck, Ben.
    <div style="clear: both;"]</div>


    I'm positive it's me and not the expensive piece of gear, oh yes. Thank you for your condolences, Ben. I hope you're having a blast with your new camera. I'd love to see something straight out of the camera if you feel like showing me...?


    Gina



  8. #8

    Re: growing pains...



    Quote Originally Posted by neuroanatomist


    In addition to exposure compensation, other things to check would be the Picture Style setting you're using on the 5DII vs. the XSi, the Auto Lighting Optimizer, and your white balance settings.


    I'll also have a go at #5. The 100mm Macro is a short telephoto - on a FF body, it makes a very nice portrait lens (pretty wide aperture, sitting between the classic portrait length of 85mm and the 'head-and-shoulders' focal length of 135mm. Whether 100mm is long enough really depends on what you're trying to shoot, and what you're going to do with the shots. By that, I mean if you're shooting candids of people, etc., and are printing smallish sizes (or on-screen viewing only), with the 5DII's low noise you'll have a fair bit of cropping that you can get away with. But, if your goal is to shoot wildlife, etc., 100mm isn't going to be nearly long enough.


    Given the IQ of the other lenses in your kit (with the exception of the 18-55mm kit lens, and as a side note, you need to update your profile!), I don't think you'll be thrilled with any of the consumer zoom options (e.g. 70-300mm IS USM). I'm one of those who really likes the 70-200mm (just got my EF 70-200mm f/2.8<span style="color: red;"]L IS II last week!). But I also have the EF 200mm f/2.8<span style="color: red;"]L II, which is the longest non-white Canon L-series lens. It's very sharp (though amazingly, not sharper than the 70-200 II at 200mm, which speaks volumes about the quality of the new zoom!). It's relatively light, fast, and not terribly expensive. But, if you buy the 200mm prime now and find yourself wanting the zoom later, that may not have been money well-spent (in my case, I think it was, but that's because I picked up the 200mm f/2.8 prime used on Craigslist for &gt;40% less than the cost of a new one, and if I do decide to sell it, which is quite possible, I'll actually make a profit).


    But, again, it comes down to what you're shooting. If you are going after birds and most wildlife, 200mm will still likely not be long enough. Even my EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6<span style="color: red;"]L IS on my 7D (=640mm on your 5DII) isn't long enough sometimes.


    Good luck with your image processing issues and lens decision!


    --John
    <div style="clear: both;"]</div>


    John,


    I'm going to check the Auto Lighting Optimizer thingy just in case. I didn't think to check that!


    --As for the lens advice: thank you! I'm not shooting wildlife (I'm
    too slow to catch birds), just people (mostly monks) and still objects,
    though yesterday I took a lot of photos of a cow (and wished wildly for
    a telephoto). Do cows count as wildlife? []


    The macro lens might work (I like macro too), but maybe I'll rent
    the 200mm you suggest, just to see how it feels. That's a good
    suggestion.


    (And yes: I'll update my profile!)



    Gina






  9. #9
    Senior Member btaylor's Avatar
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    Re: growing pains...



    Here's a couple from this week straight out of the camera apart from cropping. I don't have much I've taken during the day yet (good old work getting in the way). I'll take some this weekend and post something for you next week.


    5D MkII, 24-70mm f/2.8L @ 28mm &amp; f/2.8, 1/1250 sec, ISO 400 (I realise the highISO/shutter speed were completely unnecessary but I forgot my tripod and had to shoot handheld)


    \





    5D MkII, 24-70mm f/2.8L @ 35mm &amp; f/4.0, 3.2sec, ISO 200








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    Canon 5D Mark III | Canon 5D Mark II | Samyang 14mm f/2.8 | Canon 35mm f/1.4L USM | Sigma 85mm f/1.4 EX DG HSM |Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II |Canon 2 x Teleconverter III | Canon 580 EX II Speedlite | Really Right Stuff TVC 34L | Really Right Stuff BH55 LR | Gorillapod Focus | Really Right Stuff BH 30

  10. #10

    Re: growing pains...



    Jan, you're awesome. You're always helpful. I'm going to test the auto-mode tomorrow. I can shoot RAW in auto-mode on this camera, can't I? Even if not, the darned thing should grow legs, put gas in the car, and carry its own tripod in auto-mode. Can't imagine it won't take gorgeous photos on auto.


    Maybe (since I'm over exposing!) those 70-200 f4 versions might work better for me than I originally thought. With the Rebel I had to stick to fast lenses, you know?


    I posted photos. They're fairly representative of what my images look like now before post-processing. I'm coveting what Ben just posted. Especially those vibrant clouds.


    Thank you!


    Gina

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