Tannin
Common; sedentary.
You are never going to get first class results from that far away, Marislauva, but there are a few things you can do to improve.
* Use a tripod (if you are not doing that already).
* Use a lower ISO. As a rule of thumb: 400 most of the time, 800 if you need it, 200 if the light is fantastic, 1600 if you really need it, and 3200 if you are desperate.
* But don't let the shutter speed drop much below 1/1000th if you can help it. Even with a tripod, the faster the shutter, the sharper the shot.
* Try to find an opportunity to reshoot with better light. This takes a lot of paitence and some good luck!
Last, keep on practicing! The more pictures you take, the better you get at it. BTW, you could improve on that shot a fair bit with post processing, but in the end you can only get the detail that is there in the image in the first place, so there is no substitute for getting closer and having good light.
* Use a tripod (if you are not doing that already).
* Use a lower ISO. As a rule of thumb: 400 most of the time, 800 if you need it, 200 if the light is fantastic, 1600 if you really need it, and 3200 if you are desperate.
* But don't let the shutter speed drop much below 1/1000th if you can help it. Even with a tripod, the faster the shutter, the sharper the shot.
* Try to find an opportunity to reshoot with better light. This takes a lot of paitence and some good luck!
Last, keep on practicing! The more pictures you take, the better you get at it. BTW, you could improve on that shot a fair bit with post processing, but in the end you can only get the detail that is there in the image in the first place, so there is no substitute for getting closer and having good light.