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Try using a lower aperture for better sharpness (somewhere around f/8 if you want a fully sharp picture). Lenses usually have a significant drop in picture quality at high aperture values (beyond ~f/10). So even if you try to get everything from foreground to horizon as sharp as possible, f/14 might not be the way to go. You can increase the shutter speed to compensate for the higher brightness (that also helps to get sharp pictures of moving objects, or when moving yourself). 1/160s with 138 mm is hard to hold still enough for the picture to be sharp, so that might also be a problem here. A rule of thumb is that you risk visible camera shake at everything slower than 1 / (2* focal length) for micro four thirds sensors. This would be 1/276 s in this case. But you also need to consider the velocity of the moving object.
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Try using a lower aperture for better sharpness (somewhere around f/8 if you want a fully sharp picture). Lenses usually have a significant drop in picture quality at high aperture values (beyond ~f/10). So even if you try to get everything from foreground to horizon as sharp as possible, f/14 might not be the way to go. You can increase the shutter speed to compensate for the higher brightness (that also helps to get sharp pictures of moving objects, or when moving yourself). 1/160s with 138 mm is hard to hold still enough for the picture to be sharp, so that might also be a problem here. A rule of thumb is that you risk visible camera shake at everything slower than 1 / (2* focal length) for micro four thirds sensors. This would be 1/276 s in this case. But you also need to consider the velocity of the moving object.
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