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Nikon Lens Vibration Reduction

Lesson 19 from: Nikon Lenses: The Complete Guide

John Greengo

Nikon Lens Vibration Reduction

Lesson 19 from: Nikon Lenses: The Complete Guide

John Greengo

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Lesson Info

19. Nikon Lens Vibration Reduction

Next Lesson: Image Quality

Lessons

Class Trailer

DAY 1

1

Nikon Lens Class Introduction

06:30
2

Nikon Lens Basics

14:05
3

Focal Length: Angle of View

11:44
4

Focal Length: Normal Lenses

06:41
5

Focal Length: Wide Angle Lenses

16:09
6

Focal Length: Telephoto Lens

16:22
7

Focal Length Rule of Thumb

15:59
8

Field of View

10:06
9

Aperture Basics

15:35
10

Equivalent Aperture

07:17
11

Depth of Field

12:58
12

Maximum Sharpness

09:50
13

Starburst

06:48
14

Hyper Focal Distance

18:42
15

Nikon Mount Systems

26:41
16

Nikon Cine Lenses

07:06
17

Nikon Lens Design

20:56
18

Focusing and Autofocus with Nikon Lenses

14:15
19

Nikon Lens Vibration Reduction

06:28
20

Image Quality

04:44
21

Aperture Control and General Info

09:08
22

Nikon Standard Zoom Lenses

21:56
23

Nikon Super Zoom Lenses

06:07
24

Nikon Wide Angle Lenses

08:28
25

Nikon Telephoto Zoom Lenses

16:48
26

3rd Party Zooms Overview

06:06
27

3rd Party Zooms: Sigma

16:02
28

3rd Party Zooms: Tamron

07:31
29

3rd Party Zooms: Tokina

03:50

DAY 2

30

Nikon Prime Lens: Normal

13:50
31

Nikon Prime Lens: Wide Angle

14:17
32

Nikon Prime Lens: Ultra-Wide

09:29
33

Nikon Prime Lens: Short Telephoto

09:14
34

Nikon Prime Lens: Medium Telephoto

08:19
35

Nikon Prime Lens: Super Telephoto

17:24
36

3rd Party Primes: Sigma

07:19
37

3rd Party Primes: Zeiss

03:25
38

3rd Party Primes: Samyang

05:34
39

Lens Accessories: Filters

30:44
40

Lens Accessories: Lens Hood

13:40
41

Lens Accessories: Tripod Mount

04:41
42

Lens Accessories: Extension Tubes

04:23
43

Lens Accessories: Teleconverters

12:42
44

Macro Photography

19:11
45

Nikon Micro Lens Selection

18:29
46

Fisheye Lenses

17:59
47

Tilt Shift Photography Overview

22:40
48

Tilt Shift Lenses

06:00
49

Building a Nikon System

05:16
50

Making a Choice: Nikon Portrait Lenses

17:43
51

Making a Choice: Nikon Sport Lenses

18:47
52

Making a Choice: Nikon Landscape Lenses

14:54
53

Nikon Lens Systems

11:18
54

Lens Maintenance

10:54
55

Buying and Selling Lenses

17:36
56

Final Q&A

12:08
57

What's in the Frame

03:29

Lesson Info

Nikon Lens Vibration Reduction

Vibration reduction v r okay, so this compensates for your hand movements, there's, a gyro in your camera that can tell when you're twisting the camera up and going side to side, and it can help out for shooting under low light conditions, or whenever you can shoot it, lower shutter speeds. So this two hundred five hundred millimeter lens let's say you're at five hundred. You should probably have one five hundredth of a second selected in order to just stop the movements of your hand. If this has three stops of stabilization, we could shoot down a sixteenth of a second. If we have four stops, we could shoot down a thirtieth of a second. So for low light situations, very helpful doesn't work out for fast action sports, because we need fast shutter speeds to stop their action. But for hand holding under low light, it can really help out. Now, what it's doing is it's using and as complicated as the lens was before at a v r unit and now you got the focusing team says, okay, we got this len...

s perfect, everything moves back and forth just right, and the v r team comes in and says, yeah, we're going to put a whole bunch of lenses right in the middle, and they're going to go up and down while you're focusing, and we want to keep everything in focus. So is you tilt the camera. There is an independent group of lenses that is keeping the image focused and in place on the sensor itself and the fact that it can do this. Wow. Auto focusing and tracking subjects is just it's phenomenal to me. So that's what's happening in the system. Now, the original v r system has three stops a stabilization so you can use your lands about three stops effectively slower in shutter speeds than you would normally be ableto hand hole. They then came out with v r two, which is an improved technology. It now helps upwards of four stops of stabilization. Okay, john, question for you. I got this eighteen to fifty five lands and it says d v r two does this have tr to technology in it because it says it on the label? No, what type of v r system is in my lens? Well, you'll have to look that up online it happens to be the art to technology but you said the car to doesn't mean it's very hard to know that we are two means it has v r and the two means that this is the second generation eighteen to fifty five g lens that they've made and so the lens will not tell you on the outside whether it's v are one or two and if you want to try to find this information, you could do two things you can spend the next two hours looking this up online or you can look at the next slide where I've done the research for you and so there are a number of lenses that have the are too some of them say v r two on them because they're second versions of that focal inc aperture lands some of them just say v r but they have the new v our technology in there this is where things get a little complicated and so most of all they're fairly current lenses have this now as we get into v r you're going to find a different levels of lenses you have different switches on your lands is the most basic is turning it on and off okay, you're going to turn it on for general handheld photography it's fine it's good for pani also now there are some and good reason to believe this believe that you should not turn on v r unless you really need it so let's say you're shooting pictures of birds in flight at a thousandth of a second, you don't need the r for that, okay? Because you have a fast shutter speed that stops your emotion, and so if you don't need it, it is instituting a whole nother layer of movement, which could affect focusing. You should turn this off if you are on a good, steady tripod, because there's essentially a feedback system where it starts looking for its own movement, even though it's not moving and can cause a blurry image. So if you're on a tripod, turn it off a newer level of vibration reduction, we'll have an on off switch, but it will have a normal and active mowed down here. Normal is your standard handheld action. The nikon cameras will detect panning and will adjust for that pan emotion active is a little bit different situation it's when you are standing on a platform that is moving, whether that's, a plane or a boat or a train car, or who knows what else a skateboard. Okay, as long as it's the movement is coming from something else because they've designed this movement for your handheld movement and the vibrations that you might feel in a car or a different type of vibration than what you would naturally generate holding a camera and so active means you're shooting from another vehicle. Another newer style is one that actually has a tripod mode on it, and this is for some of their big telephoto lenses, so we have normal once again, handheld has the panning detection. If you do put it on a tripod, you could put it on a tripod, and it still is using vibration reduction. But now it notices that it's on a tripod and the type of movement it's likely to have his possibly wind movement and so that's kind of a different type of movement that you're gonna have. And the on ly cameras that have this tripod mode are a couple of their really big telephoto lenses. We're not done yet one more the newest cameras have a new sport mode, so we have the normal, which is our standard v r but now the new sport mode, it limits the vibration to the minimum needed so in the viewfinder, it is actually easier. Well, the problem, the reasons, the problem that this is solving is that when you're a sports photographer and you got that let's say, I think it downhill skier there zoom in across and they're kind of bouncing their way down and you're trying to keep them in the frame well, the vibration reduction would have this jell o effect that it was kind of hard to keep him in frame because the camera you were fighting the camera to keep things in frame. And so what this has done is it's lightened that effect so that you can track your subjects more easily. And so, it's, really, for the high end professional sports photographer and it's, exactly on the lenses that they might buy. And so it's. Not something that most of us are going to see on our day to day lenses.

Class Materials

Bonus Materials with Purchase

NikonĀ® Lenses Part 1
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 2
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 3
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 4
Field of View
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 5
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 6
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 7
NikonĀ® Lenses Part 8
NikonĀ® Lens Data

Ratings and Reviews

cliff538
 

Outstanding class! This is a must own. You will refer back to this class many times during your photog career. John has put a ton of work into this class and it shows. Being able to download the slides and other Nikon glass info is wonderful. Even if you're not a Nikon shooter you will still gleam tons of information from this class, John covers in great detail the strength and weaknesses of each lens and when you might consider using it. I was expecting a good class, but this turned into an epic class. I watched multiple videos several times. The only bad thing I can say is I "had" to order a few more lenses! Thank you John Greengo for making a truly amazing class.

Anna Fennell
 

Wow! What a course! Very in depth, lots of valuable information. John instructs with great knowledge and integrity. I have taken other online courses, NOT from Creative Live (my bad!) and was left feeling like a monkey who had learned tricks without understanding or knowledge. Now I feel I have the confidence to move forward on my photographic journey securely knowing how lenses function, what to look for and what price range I can expect. Bravo John! I'd love to see a 2020 update video as an addendum.

Fusako Hara
 

Finally I have some sense of what lens do, know what I have, what I would like to have, what lens to use, and how I can get images that I see. Best part of this session is it was made so clear, simple, logical, and practical. I am glad that I purchased this product. Now, I am going to look for more from John Greengo so I can take better understanding and take better images. Thank You.

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