![]() ![]() As Bracaglia noticed, when more than one player appeared in his viewfinder, usually only one would be sharp at f/1.4. A classic problem with this classic lens is the tissue-thin depth of field you get at maximum aperture. “So at f/1.4 and ISO 8000, the pictures were perfectly sharp.” He didn’t stay at f/1.4 for long, though. “I was using the Nikon D3s, which has no issues with noise at higher ISOs,” Bracaglia explains. Dan Bracaglia, our assistant web editor, hedged his sharpness bets when shooting the photo pictured here-using 1/2500 sec, without a flash. ![]() If the court, rink, or ring is decently lit, you can expect action-stopping shutter speeds of 1/1000 sec and faster at ISOs between 10. Shot at or near maximum aperture, it will give you fast, action-freezing shutter speeds, even in challenging light. ![]() **Into indoor arena sports like basketball, hockey, or boxing? A high-speed 85mm will deliver. **ACTION: Highspeed 85mm’s rock for indoor sports. Pop Photo staffer Dan Bracaglia froze the bball action with a Nikon 85mm f/1.4 Nikkor lens on a Nikon D3s body. ![]()
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