Once more you seem to be missing the point regarding this thread, it is all about using an ND filter on a drone for still photography, not video. And with that in mind, you have been told numerous times, and I would assume you would know (there I go assuming again, right?) that there is absolutely no DOF concerns to be taken into account, when shooting aerial photos with a drone. The reason being, because the lens will not show any difference whether you are shooting at f2 or f11. So, there is no point on earth bringing the remarks about DOF into this conversation when discussing drone photography, with the current cameras we have available to us.
We are not talking about Meta4's "40 years of picture taking", and Meta4 is NOT talking about you shooting your DSLR with an ND filter, where you may need the added DOF that an ND filter might give you. He is speaking about drone photography. We do not care what you use with your DSLR because this thread is no even remotely concerned about you shooting with ND filters to gain any DOF advantages. Please understand that, the poor horse is being beaten to death by you. If you continue to talk about DOF, it seems on your end, that the gates are down and the lights are flashing here, but there just does not seem to be a train coming along! I am beginning to think that you have the whole six pack here, but you lack the little plastic thingy that holds them all together. No disrespect meant towards you by the way, have a pleasant evening.
Perhaps you don't understand about photography pertaining to drones!
Linky for you just for your edification, no less:
REVIEW: DJI's Zenmuse X7 is Hands Down the Best Camera for Aerial Cinematography Under $10K
DJI's Zenmuse X7:
Sharpness
All four lenses looked sharp edge-to-edge and the focus rolloff looked great. The Super 35mm sensor lends a more cinematic and shallow depth of field than is found in the majority of drone footage. Between the Super 35mm sensor and the 6K resolution, you can capture details in small, far-off and out of focus objects (like leaves, tree branches, bricks) that would look like dappled watercolors on a smaller sensor with higher compression.
Pictures? Have you some to share? Haven't seen any yet?
Your quote:
"NOT talking about you shooting your DSLR with an ND filter, where you may need the added DOF that an ND filter might give you."
I clearly stated that one picture was with a Digital canon EOS M50 camera and its use with an ND filter.
You need to go back and re-read what has been written, as I fear you need to keep up with the thread conversation! Clearly you are really not understanding the whole thread either.
Take a look at the lens availability for the Inspire 2 and perhaps as a professional cinematic photographer you would understand about DOF.
BTW, I would appreciate the personal jibes be put to rest and I really don't need to be lectured
The statement "I am beginning to think that you have the whole six pack here, but you lack the little plastic thingy that holds them all together" is out of order and I take Umbridge to that! Nuff said OK.
Now, as requested once again, show me some of your pictures...Put your money where your mouth is>>>no disrespect, like your statement before in regard to the 6 pack (don't go there again please).
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