Welcome, Guest.
CLICK HERE TO REGISTER


Welcome to BirdForum.
BirdForum is the net's largest birding community, dedicated to wild birds and birding, and is absolutely FREE! You are most welcome to register for an account, which allows you to take part in lively discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Rating: Thread Rating: 1 votes, 5.00 average.
Old Monday 23rd September 2002, 16:58   #1
Colin
Axeman (Retired)
 
Colin's Avatar

 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In a Shed in a Quarry in Gloucestershire (UK)
Posts: 2,003
Blog Entries: 29
Digibinning/Digibinoing

I know that somewhere here, someone mentioned taking digital pictures thru one eyepiece of a binocular. The problem was keeping the whole thing steady.
I was sitting one a rock on a beach in northern Scotland a few days ago resting after a long hike and thought about this. I had my Nikon binnies (10x42) with me as well as my Nikon Coolpix 995. I tried an experiment and it worked. Firstly I was pleasantly surprised that the camera lens fitted snugly against the eyepiece. Hand holding the whole lot was a complete failure. Then, an idea. I 'straddled' the binnies (having focussed them first) over my thigh near to my knee. I then offered up the camera to one of the eyepieces and with the screen part swivelled upwards I could easily see the image. A tiny bit a refucussing and I had a good image. By altering the angle of my thigh with the ground I was able to alter pitch and I tried out a couple of shots of a cliff ( no birds ) and I was very happy with the result. A bit more practice and the pics should be OK. The critical thing is to get into a sitting position which is comfortable and thus avoids shaking.
Anyone else tried this or is there a better way.


Colin

__________________
Colin
Colin is offline  
Reply With Quote
BF Supporter BF Supporter 2007
Click here to Support BirdForum
Old Sunday 29th September 2002, 16:05   #2
ralph
Old Hand
 
ralph's Avatar

 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Tenby
Posts: 322
Can't think of a better way of keeping 'em steady, Colin. Believe me, I've tried. I got a few 'passable' shots of Egrets with my Coolpix 775 through my Leica 8x42BA's. The annoying thing about the 775 is that you can't take an instant picture - you can't just hit the shutter button and get a picture - there's a really annoying delay, which means the action has happened by the time the shutter has 'gone off'.

Unless anyone knows otherwise, of course ...

__________________
"Help! She's touching my special area!"
ralph is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sunday 29th September 2002, 17:25   #3
Andy Bright
2nd in command
 
Andy Bright's Avatar

 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Herts
Posts: 6,485
Hi Ralph, dunno if you mean the delay that's caused by the camera's auto-focus locking on (or trying) to the subject or the usual bane of our lives.... shutter-lag. The AF can be bypassed by using 'infinity' focus mode on some Nikons, you can fine tune the focus on your bins to get a sharpish image on the camera's monitor.
Andy B,
Watford
__________________
www.Digiscoped.com
also, if you're particularly bored, try www.andybright.com - mediocre aviation photography
Andy Bright is offline  
Reply With Quote
BF Supporter BF Supporter 2004 BF Supporter 2005 BF Supporter 2006 BF Supporter 2007 BF Supporter 2008 BF Supporter 2009
Click here to Support BirdForum
Advertisement
Reply


Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off

{googleads}
Search the net with ask.com
Help support BirdForum
Ask.com and get

Page generated in 0.09470201 seconds with 12 queries
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 16:23.