

Or I can search for all my own photos where the maximum aperture was 1.6 (my shallow depth of field photos). It took some playing around, but I ended up doing things like looking for all flower photos taken with a particular camera and setting:īreaking down the URL, means I am asking for all photos labeled “flower” taken with a Nikon D300 with a maximum aperture of 2.0 I found a pair of 2008 blog posts that showed some extra search parameters you can use in flickr search to filter results by aperture and focal length. I have a 2009 post on my camera history up til then, but the flickr searches that once worked to list of my photos taken with the cameras seems busted and even with yesterday’s tinkerings, I can’t get the older camera model parameters to work ( this links shows all my photos taken with my current Canon 7D). The Flickrriver site has a great tool that lets you see photos shared in flickr taken with various lenses, so one way to decide maybe how images compare with the Nikon 50mm f/1.4D vs the Nikon 50mm f/1.8D. As Tom Woodward pointed also keep in mind you can browse flickr by lens The thing is when you upload photos to flickr, information embedded in the image travels with it, not only date, but things like the camera model and lens, and much much more. I still stand by my nifty 50 lens, but that’s not the point. Ok photo people: New DX Nikon for Which first prime lens: 35mm or 50mm? Gardner Campbell May 30, 2015
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Yesterday, a long series of tweets about cameras and lens started because Gardner Campbell was looking for lens suggestions (his daughter has a neat summer art/photography project) To me, what’s more important about flickr is what you do not see on the site or the (still partly crippled) mobile app. My long term infatuation with flickr may be my undoing… (skipping past the gripes about flickr’s design changes) (also skipping past whatever monkey goo that Google is offering for your photos) (anything else?).
