I've been shooting Canon dSLR bodies since 2007. A couple of years ago I bought a 7D. That first summer was more or less a disaster. Most everything had a lot of noise and was out of focus. I determined 2 things were wrong. The first was that I upgraded the firmware. That cleared up the noise issues. The second turned out to me and my technique. I pretty much had to relearn how to hand hold my camera to get sharp photos. I think over the years my hands have weakened and are not as steady as they used to be. I'm once again getting great photos. Yesterday we went to the zoo, I was shooting at 1600 ISO with 1/30 second shutter speeds inside the buildings. I got some really great results from a lens I thought was toast 2 years ago.
Try this: Shoot a scene hand held. Then shoot the same scene using a tripod. If they look the same you might be able to get a camera shop to allow you to do some test shot using your lens and another body, and/or your body with a different lens.
It's conceivable that you have a bad lens or that your auto focus system is faulty. But more likely it's something you are inadvertently doing differently. Little adjustments in your stance, using a tripod with mirror lock up, etc could make all the difference in the world.
bobcouch wrote:
They almost look like exposure time is set too long.
I've tried doing a reset to default, but it didn't seem to help.
That statement concerns me. It tells me that you are just shooting in auto mode and don't really know what your camera is doing. You can get the shutter speed from your EXIF data so that you can tell if your shutter is too long.
That said, I strongly recommend getting back to basics and starting from there. If you are not familiar with your camera I highly recommend a book
called "Complete Digital Photography" by Ben Long.
Chuck D.
โAdventure is just bad planning.โ - Roald Amundsen
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