Current status: 95/150 supporters
you obviously enjoy your new tools.Welcome to Nikongear!!!
Yes - for me it was the right decision, because I like low-light photography and the D850 Sensor is much better than the sensor from the 5D MK3; my only regret was the lost of the Canon 85mm f/1.2; the Nikon Alternative for Portraiture (105mm f/1.4 ist so expensive...) At the moment my main-question ist: How to minimize 'Micro-camera-shakes' with my handheld shots (I mostly shoot handheld and my first experiences seem to show, that - without IS/VR) I need for the 35mm at least 1/160 sec (handheld); for a 105mm I would need at least 1/500 sec.... etc.Tipps for this problem?
the Z line of cameras with build-in vr, welcome!
Yes for critical sharpness you need quite high shutter speed with the D850; VR lens, monopod/tripod or short duration flash,,,
Yes - for me it was the right decision, because I like low-light photography and the D850 Sensor is much better than the sensor from the 5D MK3; my only regret was the lost of the Canon 85mm f/1.2; the Nikon Alternative for Portraiture (105mm f/1.4 ist so expensive...) At the moment my main-question ist: How to minimize 'Micro-camera-shakes' Tipps for this problem?
practice, practice, practice and the right technique for standing, holding and breething. Learn from people who shoot guns professionally...if the 1.4/105E is too expensive you might try my 2.0/200VR...
I learned a lot from this guyhttps://www.pentaxforums.com/reviews/long-exposure-handhelds/introduction.html
Beyond what breath/posture control and leaning against nearby objects can produce, I suspect the monopod is the most portable and efficiently deployable solution for for slow shutter speed shooting.