focus selection selection? What is yours?
davidweaver
Registered Users Posts: 681 Major grins
This seems like a reasonable palce for posting event photo questions too.
How do you have your focus selection set up? Once upon a time there was one focus selection in the center of the frame. Now there are various focusing methods and technologies available to us.
What is your focusing point(s) setting for the majority of your wedding (event) work?
A second question, do you shoot Continuous Auto or Single Auto?
i'm really curious about this.
Thanks,
David
How do you have your focus selection set up? Once upon a time there was one focus selection in the center of the frame. Now there are various focusing methods and technologies available to us.
What is your focusing point(s) setting for the majority of your wedding (event) work?
A second question, do you shoot Continuous Auto or Single Auto?
i'm really curious about this.
Thanks,
David
0
Comments
When doing the portraits/formals, I use the appropriate focus point as I have more time to let the camera/lens hunt a bit if it needs to. During the processional/recessional I shoot Single shot AI Servo. At all other times, it's single shot. I've never used the continious, not even for the bouquet/garter toss. HTH
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I'm always on center point for everything
I'm almost always on single shot (sometimes I switch to AI servo for the recessional because their moving a little bit faster)
What kind of events are you talking about, just formal stuff? Or sports too, in that case continuous frames and AI servo are your friend.
The multi controler slows things up a bit at first, but once you get used to it, it becomes 2nd nature and things speed up again. It works well for me anyway.
Matt
Bodies: Canon 5d mkII, 5d, 40d
Lenses: 24-70 f2.8L, 70-200 f4.0L, 135 f2L, 85 f1.8, 50 1.8, 100 f2.8 macro, Tamron 28-105 f2.8
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Weddings/Portraits and anything else that catches my eye.
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That, btw, is one of the primary reasons I don't want to switch to a split screen focusing system, since it would only support one central focus point. Great for wildlife/sport shooters and their super long telephoto, not so good for shooting people wide open in tight quarters.
I adjust the center point for whether it is landscape or vertical so I don't have to crop the photo when the action is happening to fast to focus and reframe (if I didn't do this it would cost me hours of cropping in photoshop to fix the compositions). If things are moving slow I normally just use the center point the recompose.
I shoot single unless the subjects are moving in any way then I shoot continuous.
I imagine you will end up using what works best for you..
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I only find that I need continuous focus mode for football and basketball (college), I use single for all else.
Great name by the way! I still prefer the center focusing and then I shoot in single shot mode so once I lock it in I bounce around for composition. I've seen some friends dial around and use more of the other focusing points and a lot of people are now using the back button for focusing which gives some more control but I never really liked that.
Rock on,
DJ
davidjay
www.davidjay.com
"A true measure of your worth includes all the benefits others have gained from your success."
I mainly use continuous focus mode - this seems to give more consistent results with the Nikon system, in fact it is remarkably good. If it is really dark, I'll use the single focus mode because that lets me use the focus assist light on my SB800s.
For actual use, I probably use the AF buttons on the camera 50% and the half press of the shutter button 50%.
So I'm all over the place, depending on the actual situation.
It's funny, when I upgraded to the D3 from the D2 series, I hated the new AF - took me ages to get to grips with it. Once I had gotten my head around the whole thing, I really like it. If I take 2,000 shots at a wedding, I bet no more than 4 or 5 are dumped due to poor focusing.
Of course, lots are deleted for just being crap, but I can't blame the cameras for that
Cheers!
David
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I do the same thing - but with Nikon using the rear control button. After a few times it's like second nature.
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