Camera Shake

Thanks Eric. I'm feeling much more satisified about this now. That's what I like about this forum.
Regards
...Wes
Patience, patience, patience.
Hello all.
How much of an issue is camera shake for you folks. I have a lot
of outdoor shots recently that appear to have camera shake. I'm
seriously wondering if I simply move to soon after the shutter
releases - before the image capture is complete. My previous
camera was a fully manual SLR, so I not quite used to shutterlag or
autofocus lag. I assume that once the shutter noise is finished,
the image is captured? I assume that the "recording" banner is
just recording lag and doesn't have anything to do with the image
capture. Any one else dealt with these issues?
Regards
...Wes
--
Eric
F707
http://www.pbase.com/erichocinc
 
John, HG:

Thanks for the input. One always appreciates when their eyeball is calibrated with the help of friends.
Regards
...Wes
 
You can't judge the sharpness using a resampled smaller image. I looked at your 5MP original image and don't see any signs of camera shake. Slight softness is normal for all digital camera images and require a little software sharpening. What can be done in image editing software is the true test of any digital camera output. What comes out of the camera is a temporary step to the final product.

Below are two images, the top one is a crop of your 5MP original image the other has auto-levels and a little unsharp mask applied. Looks good to me.



--
Bobbo
 




Wes,

Rest assured: Your camera has no focusing problem, nor your camera
didn't shake. The only problem is you technique of reducing the
photo size. Please compare.

Regards, Yehuda
Wow Yehuda! That's really sharp. What resampling method/program did you use?
 

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