I see something similar in Biscayne Bay, just outside my home, every afternoon, but the reflections are so bright it’s almost hard just to look at them! That the reflections aren’t blown out, AND that you even got some detail on the side of the boat is amazing. I didn’t think I could do anything like that, but after seeing your photo, intend to try later today. I wonder if a polarizing filter might reduce the brightness of the reflections. Until I saw this photo, I just assumed it was an impossible photo for me to capture, and it still might be. I’ll have to use my long 200mm lens, so it will be with my D750, and no polarizing filter as I don’t have one that size.
Second photo is strange - verticals remain vertical, so you must have used a long lens (?), and the door is warped, as if you were shooting downwards, at an impossible angle. …or was the door really that warped? I need to view your image in a darker room, so I can see the interior detail.
You’re welcome, regarding the back button focusing. For me, eventually it just got burned into my brain that I had to do that before capturing an image. I was too stubborn about this - several people told me very strongly I should do it, and the video was the final straw. For a while, I found it confusing, but after a month or so it was completely natural. Now I do this on all my cameras.
Not much new here - last week I took a fall, so things hurt in places I didn’t know even existed. My fault. So I’ve not been very active. The only thing that happened was someone in my building burnt their dinner, setting off the fire alarm, so we all had to rush outside. I grabbed my M8 with the Chinese lens - big mistake. I found myself outside at night, with a 35mm lens that acted like a 50, needing to shoot wide open which this lens is not very good at, on the M8 which was at ISO 100. I bumped it up to ISO 640, and decided that it was going to be a battle of me vs. the camera, and I intended to win, which meant telling my hands to behave and stay still. Out of ten photos, half were junk, one was technically ok, but a lousy photo, and the last photo got everything together properly for the photo.
I learned my lesson - leave one camera at all times available, with a wide lens, ready for me to snatch and grab it, and head to wherever I need/want to take a photo. I’m still amazed the above photo came out as well as it did, but the crowd of people was om the other side of the fire truck.
For today, I’ll try to take the boat photo I wanted to take yesterday, but the weather didn’t cooperate, and see if I can get an acceptable reflection shot, with the sun reflecting off the water right into my eyes. It’s hard for me to even look at it…