Recent Posts

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21
Your Weekly Blog / Re: February 2026
« Last post by ARTUROARTISTA on February 20, 2026, 13:55:45 »
never have seen that, what part it is?
I think it's a detail of the wing.
22
Lens Talk / Re: Switch from 200-500E to 500mm PF?
« Last post by Ilkka Nissilä on February 20, 2026, 12:06:38 »
I carried the 200-500 on a beefy monopod for two snowshoe trips in Yellowstone today. This fellow was beyond Wraith Falls. The second frame is a crop of the first. By the end of the second trip, up Specimen Ridge above the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, I was bushed. I'm getting too old for that -- the 500 PF seems like a solution.

Very beautiful images.
23
Nature, Flora, Fauna & Landscapes / Re: Yellowstone in Winter
« Last post by Thomas Stellwag on February 20, 2026, 10:51:00 »
am freezing myself, looking at those pictures. I like them all, no 1 is my favourite as it shows a semingly unmotivated freezing bison
24
Your Weekly Blog / Re: February 2026
« Last post by Thomas Stellwag on February 20, 2026, 10:46:46 »
On Monday I bought a Nikon S-KT microscope from a retired pharmacist and then installed a camera adapter. Photo of a detail of a mosquito. D5300

never have seen that, what part it is?
25
People, Portraits, Street, PJ & Cityscapes / Re: Professor
« Last post by Thomas Stellwag on February 20, 2026, 10:43:54 »


In today's society, with its often politically volatile and questionable attitudes, it is incredibly valuable to have such people among us.
And it is important to appreciate them accordingly. Thank you for doing so.
26
Camera Talk / Re: The Lens Adapter Nikon REFUSED to Build
« Last post by Les Olson on February 20, 2026, 05:49:50 »
I think the main issue of making a Z mount equivalent to the D500 is that the fast sensor readout enabling silent photography at high fps and with minimal rolling shutter distortion necessitates an expensive sensor and Nikon might not end up making a profit from such development just for the high end DX crowd. [...] What people who are asking for a Z D500 equivalent really want is a substantially higher pixel density sensor with similar read times as the Z8/Z9 and it could end up costing as much as the Z8 easily, and still it would be a niche camera since wide angles would be negatively affected and fast standard zooms would need to be redesigned for DX Z for such camera models to get enough user base beyond the bird photography niche.

Nikon will at some point have to develop a new DX sensor - "a" meaning there will only be one, because they will need to use it across the DX range and for a long time, in order to recoup the development costs. If that was a 45MP DX sensor it could simply go straight into the Z8II. 

However ... the D500 suffered because although it did offer higher pixel-density versus the 20MP D5 and D6, it did not versus the 45MP D850 when that appeared only a year later, and although a (say) 45MP DX sensor has higher pixel-density than the current Z8 and Z9, it also would suffer if later iterations of the Z8/9 had 80MP or 100MP (DX crops of 35 and 44MP). So a lot will depend on how Nikon expects the Z8/9 to evolve over the next couple of iterations. 

The need to use the sensor across the DX range means cost and suitability for video are likely to be key factors, especially if the predictions of a DX - ie, less expensive - counterpart to the ZR in 2026 are correct. The RED Komodo/Komodo-X use a 20MP Super 35 (27 x 14mm) sensor to do 6K at 40/80 fps, and cost $3000 and $7000, so a 24MP partially stacked DX sensor giving 6K at 60 fps would match well.
27
Lens Talk / Re: Switch from 200-500E to 500mm PF?
« Last post by Gil Aegerter on February 20, 2026, 03:30:25 »
I carried the 200-500 on a beefy monopod for two snowshoe trips in Yellowstone today. This fellow was beyond Wraith Falls. The second frame is a crop of the first. By the end of the second trip, up Specimen Ridge above the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, I was bushed. I'm getting too old for that -- the 500 PF seems like a solution.
28
Lens Talk / Re: Switch from 200-500E to 500mm PF?
« Last post by Brute on February 20, 2026, 03:23:45 »
Nice bulls in the snow :)
Have both lens and both on a D500. The 200-500 is great if anything is closer. Use the 500 for longer distances.  The 500 is lighter for carrying longer distances.
Can always use portrait mode  on the 500 if something is to close for the panorama mode.
Thats why I got the 500 because most of the time I was on 500mm on the 200-500.
Would get a PF 600 5.6 if they made one. Don't think they are going to add anything to f mounts anymore though.
29
People, Portraits, Street, PJ & Cityscapes / Re: Professor
« Last post by ARTUROARTISTA on February 20, 2026, 00:20:59 »
After a fifty-five years gap, I finally met again the best and dearest literature professor from my senior high days.
Age 89 but his wits are as fresh as ever. By request of his daughter, he finally accepted to lay down and publish his boyhood memories - his father was arrested at home, in presence of his mother and himself, then a five-years old boy. There is little drama in boyhood memories, lacking full understanding of the circumstances, although many events may appear chilling in retrospect. His father came back. The final chapter however is the dry list of very close relatives who did not - name, arrest date, deportation date, train number, and then - a black hole in most cases (more than ten).

In the seventies, when we met, I could not even imagine what he had to endure (not to mention poverty). He was, and still is, committed to humanism and universalism, never alluded to anything, never.

We spent an hour chatting and sharing views and memories, also with his daughter (a literature professor too) and granddaughter (a Shoah historian).

Zf, 40/2.
I'm glad you've reunited with the master. Medieval Spanish Hebrew literature is incredible; I've read many books and learned a great deal from the mystics and sages of the Spanish Kabbalah.
30
People, Portraits, Street, PJ & Cityscapes / Re: Professor
« Last post by golunvolo on February 19, 2026, 23:59:42 »
Much respect. Thank you for sharing such personal image and stories.

 
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