Focusing at large aperatures?

JayClark79JayClark79 Registered Users Posts: 253 Major grins
edited July 25, 2010 in Technique
I see alot of people say they shoot weddings or anything in low light with 2.8+ aperatures, how are they getting more then 1 person in focus? When I try it I always get 1 point in focus, and the other person or persons are out of focus because of the shallow DOF....

What gives?

My Site http://www.jayclarkphotography.com


Canon Rebel T1i | Canon 50mm 1.8 | Tamron 28-75mm 2.8 | Canon 75-300mm EF f 4.5 III | Opteka Grip | Canon 580exII | 2 Vivitar 383 Flash's and a home studio setup.

Comments

  • SamSam Registered Users Posts: 7,419 Major grins
    edited July 25, 2010
    Jay,

    Try looking at this: http://www.dofmaster.com/dofjs.html

    The DOF will vary based on focal length, aperture, and the distance from the camera to the subject.

    Sam
  • JayClark79JayClark79 Registered Users Posts: 253 Major grins
    edited July 25, 2010
    Nice link sam... So what im getting is to shoot at a large aperature, I dont want to be as zoomed in? or the greater the distance between me and my main focus point the greater the space that is in focus?

    My Site http://www.jayclarkphotography.com


    Canon Rebel T1i | Canon 50mm 1.8 | Tamron 28-75mm 2.8 | Canon 75-300mm EF f 4.5 III | Opteka Grip | Canon 580exII | 2 Vivitar 383 Flash's and a home studio setup.
  • LiquidAirLiquidAir Registered Users Posts: 1,751 Major grins
    edited July 25, 2010
    Often you can't get more than one person in focus. Part of the trick to shooting events with fast lenses is to pick the right person to focus on. I try to think about what story I am telling with the image. What point of view is my image telling its story from? What are my subjects paying attention to? I am I focusing on that or their reactions?
  • kevinpwkevinpw Registered Users Posts: 124 Major grins
    edited July 25, 2010
    JayClark79 wrote: »
    Nice link sam... So what im getting is to shoot at a large aperature, I dont want to be as zoomed in? or the greater the distance between me and my main focus point the greater the space that is in focus?

    That's what I've learned through experience as well.
Sign In or Register to comment.