You may also want to give back button focus a try. 1/500-second should be a good starting place to freeze action. I suggest you start by setting your shutter speed dial to "T." Also, assign the rear dial to shutter speed. The camera will take care of the post-exposure brightening. If you shoot manual plus auto ISO, you'll have total control over both shutter speed and depth of field. Is it possible the my shaky hand and slow shutter speeds cause the blurry pics?Īs you suspect, the shutter speeds the camera is choosing are too slow to freeze motion. I usually shot at "A" mode and I see that the camera is picking relativity slow shutter speeds 1/60 - 1/20 and I'm not using a tripod. When trying to take pictures of dogs/children in motion, many of them are blurry. I'm having trouble taking the "3D" motion shots _in-house_. I use AF-C (single / zone) to shoot 3D motion (I mean objects that are coming towards me) and AF-S zone mode to shot 2D motions (objects that are moving on a plain parallel to my camera's plain).
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