practicing in the park....
pepper44
Registered Users Posts: 170 Major grins
I took my new camera to the park to practice, I'm having trouble getting it to focus where I want. This is what I ended up with, tell me what you think:
I know the butterfly is a little out of focus, but I tried so hard....:dunno
Any suggestions are welcome.
-Amy
I know the butterfly is a little out of focus, but I tried so hard....:dunno
Any suggestions are welcome.
-Amy
0
Comments
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
tristansphotography.com (motorsports)
Canon 20D | 10-22 | 17-85 IS | 50/1.4 | 70-300 IS | 100/2.8 macro
Sony F717 | Hoya R72
Three things I did with the 350d: avoid auto mode (I still use P mode quite a bit); use the centre focus point; and set the exposure metering to partial metering. I also found that a lot of the softness I found was due to camera shake rather than any problem with the focusing. Play around with the higher ISOs to check this out.
regards
alan
Bugs
Spiders
Flowers
composition. The first shot is also nicely composed but is also a little blown
out.
I use a tool called "ExifReader" to view Exif data and I see you've got the
camera set to Auto and metering set to "Division". Does the XT have
"Evaluative" metering? You might have better results with that. Or maybe
my exif reader is incorrect in labeling the metering mode?
Your bee and butterfly are taken at 1/160th and 1/80th of a second. You
might try a higher f stop--maybe f11 or so. As for AF, look through the
camera manual and you'll notice the Canon can use multiple points. In the
case that feature is enabled, the camera trys to use the points with the
most contrast as AF points. Using the Canon supplied software, you can
see where the focus point was set. For the bees, I am going to guess it's
to the right and more toward the petal.
The short version, f11 or better and center point AF (or be sure what you're
focused on).
Nice work, keep 'em comin'
Ian
nice job ian - thanks mate
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I'm not one to give up easily though.
-Amy
www.amyamosphotography.com
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
Hi Amy,
I'm having similar problems with a brand new 20D. I like to shoot manual and use the center focus as my preference. If the 20D is like your Digital Rebel XT, the multi-pattern focus will pick from the closest point. I ended up with a few OOF wasp pixs till I read this in the manual. Now I just center, recompose and shoot. Wish I could say they come out.
I think it's just a matter of getting used to new gear and shooting lots of pictures. I hope that eventually it will become second nature like my old, trusty Pentax is.
A picture is but words to the eyes.
Comments are always welcome.
www.pbase.com/Higgmeister