Hyperfocal question
OK, I am going next week on a photography vacation and will be taking a quite a few landscapes. I want to get the opinions of the expericed photographers here on this.
If I understand this, I can use a 17mm lens at f8 and focus 5.93 feet in front of me and have everything from 5.93 feet to infinity in focus. Is that correct? Do you use this, and if not why not?
I have a copy of a chart that provides a matrix for the different variables.
If you don't answer and my whole vacation is a photo bust, I'll just lay the blame on all of you. :rofl :rofl
Thanks for any input you might have.
Sam
If I understand this, I can use a 17mm lens at f8 and focus 5.93 feet in front of me and have everything from 5.93 feet to infinity in focus. Is that correct? Do you use this, and if not why not?
I have a copy of a chart that provides a matrix for the different variables.
If you don't answer and my whole vacation is a photo bust, I'll just lay the blame on all of you. :rofl :rofl
Thanks for any input you might have.
Sam
0
Comments
yeah i suppose i could learn that
but here's what i do. stop down lens (f/8, f/11, maybe more, rarely less). focus 1/4 to 1/3 the way into my scene, and fire!
general rule of thumb is that there's twice more dof behind the focus spot than in front of it. so don't waste your in-focus range by focusing always on infinity.
don't tell anyone but i rarely will shoot with actual calculated hyperfocal distances ... i'm more of a "feel" shooter, and i guess that it comes from experience.
but... you can for sure get great results if you follow the above advice. if you want to refer to a hyperfocal chart, well that's cool, too whatever gets you going, sam!
good luck, share the love when you get back!
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I have been kinda doing it the way you sugested. I just wondered what the result might be if rather than focus on a point say 1 mile into a 3 mile view, could I focus on a leaf or rock 5 feet in front of me and have the leaf / rock and the mt. top 3 miles in the distance in focus.
OH, and to clarify, I won't be measuring out the exact 5.93 feet. I would just guess, but would be different than focusing a mile away.
I will try f11 or f16 as well.
I just got a 17-40mm f/4L for this trip. (So much for thinking this digital camera hobby / sickness was going to be economical. The damn lens cost more that the camera I thought I was originally going to buy.)
Sam
Also, if your chart says 5' - infinity that does not happen if you focus at 5' or at infinity. It happens if you focus on a point out there somewhere. Your chart will tell you.
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Villa Del Rio II, Talamban, Pit-os, Cebu, Ph
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Villa Del Rio II, Talamban, Pit-os, Cebu, Ph
I haven't come across that feature in with any of the Nikons that I've shot, maybe they have it in the D-1/2 family
This is one of those esoteric procedures that is supposed to provide sublime quality, but in reality it just wastes time and mental energy. Elitists love it because it makes them look so smart and snappy.
You can get the same or better resuts by using small apertures and focusing on your subject of interest. It's true, no special slide rules, no need to grow white wild hair and speak with an accent, no need to try and figure out how to focus. Just focus and forget about it.
Hyperfocal...just say no.
Ask me how I feel about other stupid redherring ideas some time hehehe
"Failure is feedback. And feedback is the breakfast of champions." - fortune cookie
I never learned how to figure this stuff out so I use the Depth of feid preview on my camera to see if I like what it shows me before I shoot.
When I shot this photo another photographer was watching me do it, sitting in the road shooting these flowers at 4 feet with the mountains behind them (hand held). The other shooter asked me which I was trying to get in focus, the flowers or the mountains? I looked up at him, then back through the camera and took my shot.
I stood up and looked at him and said "All of it".
When I walked away I glanced back and saw him squating in the same spot. I wonder how he did.
This is what I got, Velvia ISO 50 slide film, f/22, 1/30th, 28mm lens.
Do you remember by chance where you were focusing?
I will have 4 or 5 days to figure this out.
Thanks,
Sam
Nothing fancy needed. Focus on your subject. All the other fancy hocus pocus is just a waste of time. Thank you for the example Greaper. That was a gem.
"Failure is feedback. And feedback is the breakfast of champions." - fortune cookie
Film has always been cheap, with digital, well, it has never been cheaper.
(I even bracket when not using a tripod, when I am really serious about wanting a keeper, can't always count on my vision on the DOF thing)
g
Sam, can't wait to see your shots from this trip, hehe. I, for one, expect great things.............