Shared by Nancy Nichol Bandla
This is not my photograph, but I love the way the little quy has tucked himself into the lens.
This looks to have been reposted many times over the web, but it is a fun pic. Looks like a Little Owl.
Shared by Nancy Nichol Bandla
This is not my photograph, but I love the way the little quy has tucked himself into the lens.
This looks to have been reposted many times over the web, but it is a fun pic. Looks like a Little Owl.
They both have removable lenses. She has a Vivitar V3800N that has a 35mm lens, though it’s pretty grubby and she said she thinks that one has a hair in it from the last time she used it like 10 years ago, and a 50-150mm that also looks to have some macro settings. Some videos I watched on it seem to say it’s alright for its age as basicness.
The other I didn’t look too closely at yet, but it is a Minolta and I believe it had a 50mm lens. That one felt a bit cheaper and was all plastic, body and lens, while the Vivitar had solid feeling lenses.
I want to play with them because they’re there, but after looking at film and what it costs to just get negatives or scans, I feel I’m up to the cost to get one of the Sony A6000 kits I’d been looking at and I’d have a still pretty modern mirrorless setup. I’ll probably play with it just since it’s here though. Maybe shoot like 3 rolls and see how I feel about it.
The binoc pics I feel are getting better. It’s a bit more awkward of a setup than would be optimal, but I’m getting photos I feel are worth keeping at this point and my editing has gotten better if nothing else. I’ve gotten better at avoiding making them all looking like paintings from cranking all the sliders up about twice as far as necessary. It’s definitely a hobby full of things that interest me, but with some already expensive hobbies, cameras have been intimidating, especially if I want to shoot animals. All the bird photographers always recommend 600 or 800 mm lenses to the people asking what to buy and they just look huge and expensive even for the “affordable” Sigma/Tamron ones used. I wasn’t sure if that was overkill, but looking through the 150 mm, it barely even felt like more than a 2x zoom. My binocs are 24x and even that still leaves stuff feeling far away moreso than I’d want. I may just be very ignorant about it all though.