We're now well into that time of year when we reminisce about the good times we enjoyed over the past season (with the help of the 'Favourite Photo' thread), while planning next season's adventures.
I am just getting to grips with (
yet another) new camera and exploring its capabilities. I have greatly enjoyed my two Olympus OM-D cameras, although my E-M1 had a somewhat chequered history. A strap lug parted company with the body during my New Zealand trip and, although it was repaired by Olympus under warranty, it did dent my confidence in the camera somewhat. When I recently suffered a shutter failure, it spurred me into a decision I'd been considering for some time, and led to me buying an Olympus E-M1 Mk.ii.
At first glance, the new version looks and feels very similar to the earlier model but there are significant improvements to the performance. I don't expect these changes to have much effect on butterfly photography but I have already experienced the very considerable improvement in the tracking auto-focus capability, when photographing birds-in-flight. This is a feature that I have missed, since changing systems from my Nikon D300s.
The new E-M1 Mk.ii does seem to have re-acquired that ability to lock onto a moving bird and to stay with it, even when it passes in front of background 'distractions' (trees, shrubs, etc.) I haven't had much time to practise, yet, but show an example below:
![BIF1_2017.jpg (64.18 KiB) Viewed 1127 times Radley GP, Oxon - 25th November 2017<br />Olympus E-M1MkII with Leica 100-400mm lens - 1/2000s@f/5.7 ISO1250 [trackAF]](./files/thumb_11310_079928475be71cae1e52a0ae6090150d)
- Radley GP, Oxon - 25th November 2017
Olympus E-M1MkII with Leica 100-400mm lens - 1/2000s@f/5.7 ISO1250 [trackAF]
The new camera retains the automatic 'stacking' facility, which I found particularly valuable for flower photography, and provides even faster sequence shooting, which I shall hope to use in the Spring, to record Brimstone feeding behaviour, as I did last year.
In fact, I used stacking last night, to process a burst of around 50 shots of the 'super moon'. The final image is as much a product of computer processing as it is of photography! I followed a 'recipe' I found on the web at
https://darkartsastro.ca/lunar-image-st ... -worth-it/
This recipe involved pre-processing the individual shots with
PIPP software, then using
Registax 6 to 'stack' the individual images and, finally, using Lucy-Richardson deconvolution (available in the
Raw Therapee image processor), to remove the blurring caused by atmospheric turbulence. My final result is shown below:
![Supermoon_20171203.jpg (143.34 KiB) Viewed 1127 times Abingdon, Oxon - 3rd December 2017<br />Olympus E-M1MkII with Leica 100-400mm lens - 1/1250s@f/8 ISO640 [49 images stacked]](./files/thumb_11310_bbcab6e490a26924694d920e0a880802)
- Abingdon, Oxon - 3rd December 2017
Olympus E-M1MkII with Leica 100-400mm lens - 1/1250s@f/8 ISO640 [49 images stacked]
By the Spring, I shall hopefully have gained confidence with the camera and be full of ideas for a new season's photography
Mike