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Its the other way round, because ive been shooting a lot for 32 years my muscle memory says shutter half pressed to focus . Pressing the back button instead is counter intuitive and not for me.
I know what the theory is, i'm just saying it isnt for everybody - in my opinion with a decent lens you arent going to miss much due to microseconds taken refocussing anyway, unless your subject is moving in which case locking the focus point i going to be pointless anyway
We've clearly been using different gear, I didn't go AF till after the millenium when I'd been shooting 20 years, so half pressing the shutter button to focus is weird. BBF separates focussing and shooting, which is intuitive in my head. Whenever I pick up a camera with shutter button focussing, I end up wrestling with it.Its the other way round, because ive been shooting a lot for 32 years my muscle memory says shutter half pressed to focus . Pressing the back button instead is counter intuitive and not for me.
I used to think the same as you but logic was telling me 1000s of people all saying the same thing was worth persevering. I'd never go back to the focus / shutter combination now.
We've clearly been using different gear, I didn't go AF till after the millenium when I'd been shooting 20 years, so half pressing the shutter button to focus is weird. BBF separates focussing and shooting, which is intuitive in my head. Whenever I pick up a camera with shutter button focussing, I end up wrestling with it.
Must admit, I've never knowingly bimbled![]()
Your right it's not for everybody, I've been pressing the button since 1984 when there was no other choice (apart from the cable release / self timer). I didn't realise or understand the benefits until I studied them. In the beginning I couldn't see the point in it. However, that was soon to change ( evolution not revolution) If you have no inclination or interest then that's fine but I don't subscribe to the principle you can't unlearn how to stop using the shutter and start to learn how to press the BBF. Repetition creates muscle memory and if you use your camera with some frequency it will just click into place (no pun intended) - you've tried it which does suggest a bit of interest, so maybe it is worth practising ? - if not then use whatever you feel comfortable with.
I started using BBF a few weeks ago, really just to see what it was like and not expecting to stick with it but after only a few hours it felt pretty natural. I still, albeit pretty rarely now, forget where the button is on occasions and have to look for it but most of the time my thumb is on the button by muscle memory as you say. What I find I really like is the separate thought processes of focusing and metering, rather than one button doing both, makes me think more about what I want to focus on and what I want to meter off.
If you use BBF and you get on with it then that's great, you have to use what works best for you. But it does annoy me when some people make out that if you don't use BBF then you're not a good photographer.

I tried BBF a while ago, yes for more than 1 outing, and I'll be honest I don't see the benefit of it for the way I shoot, and even less now with my current 1DX and 7D2 as I use the back buttons all the time for different things depending on what I'm shooting. On these cameras using BBF limits you from making full use of the cameras' capabilities, IMVHO and again depending on what you shoot.
I do see the point if you often need to switch between something static and something moving or focus-recompose, but then I assign the DoF button to switch between One-Shot and AI-Servo when I need to. Likewise I've always used the AE-lock button if I need to separate the exposure from what I'm focussing on.
If you use BBF and you get on with it then that's great, you have to use what works best for you. But it does annoy me when some people make out that if you don't use BBF then you're not a good photographer.
I don't think I have read any posts where anybody has acutely said this. (If I have missed this please feel free to point this out to me.)
As I said in post #48 use whatever works for you......
I didn't say it was anyone in this thread, but it does happen.
Ok.... ?
It was a generalised comment not confined to this thread, forum or even the Internet.
That said, saying that using BBF is evolutionary in how to use a camera does also imply that I am unevolved, ergo inferior, because I user the shutter button, so that does have a whiff of elitism regarding the usage of BBF.
I suppose you could apply that principle to people who don't, carry a mobile phone, have a flat screen LCD or even own a computer.
The main advantage of BBF is that you don't need to keep recomposing after each shot - the shutter press isn't refocussing every time. So you can pick a focus point then let go of the focus button, compose away and take multiple shots without focus hunting/changing between them. Means you can be faster and not miss anything due to refocusing every time.
And,,, it is fast and more accurate because you can lock focus on a moving target while holding down the back button and firing off shots here and there. With the traditional front button the focus system has to refocus each time you lift your finger unless you hold it down.
Honestly, if you are hitting focus on the wrong spot (background) that is probably not the servo mode. If you are getting soft or out of focus that could be do to the servo mode.GoodI wish it wasn't mine.
With the traditional front button the focus system has to refocus each time you lift your finger unless you hold it down.
Still on the subject of focus, I heard someone say that focus achieved through LiveView was consistently sharper over using the viewfinder. (I'm talking auto focus here, not zooming in and setting focus manually).
The release of the shutter button also has 2 positions, you can fire off some shots and release straight back into the half-pressed position without stopping the AF. I do it with all the sports and action stuff I shoot, firing off small bursts here and there whilst constantly focussing.
Most can't do that. It is so much easier with the back button.The release of the shutter button also has 2 positions, you can fire off some shots and release straight back into the half-pressed position without stopping the AF. I do it with all the sports and action stuff I shoot, firing off small bursts here and there whilst constantly focussing.
....The main advantage of LiveView (unless you are shooting video) is when photographing a fairly static subject on a tripod and you can 'zoom' in to fine tune the focus. There's too much delay if shooting high frame rates - For stills, LiveView behaves at strictly one shot at a time more like a non-digital camera.
I use a 7D Mark II and expect that the 5D Mark III also has the ability to customise BBF on both the AF-ON and AE-LOCK (* star icon) buttons - I have AF + ONE-SHOT + 1 AF pt on one button and AF + AI-SERVO + AF zone on the other button. Being side by side it's all easy-peasy under my thumb.
Most can't do that. It is so much easier with the back button.
As a noob I've already found a great reason to use bbf and that's for landscapes and other filter shots. I was shooting through three nd filters and the camera wouldn't focus all that easily. BBF allowed me to focus, leave it set and then attach or push the filters into place, just leaving me to meter/dial in my speed. This wouldn't be possible on the kit lens if you had to focus manually THEN attach filters, because the front of the lens turns. I left BBF set up and have not found a reason to change it back.
Certainly - but BBF is much more efficient:Yes that's a great reason to use it of course you can always use AF to focus on and then put it into manual. It's a bit like taking your car out of gear.
Certainly - but BBF is much more efficient:
Switching to MF:
BBF Method:
- Focus camera
- Switch lens to MF
- Insert filters
- Shoot
- Review
- remove filters
- switch lens to AF
- Re-Focus Camera
- Switch lens to MF
- Insert filters
- Shoot
- Review
- Focus Camera
- Insert filters
- Shoot
- Review
- remove filters
- Re-Focus Camera
- Insert filters
- Shoot
- Review
I generally use the following process
1 Focus camera
2 Shoot
3 Apply filters in lightoom
No good whatsoever if you need a ND or a polariser, you can't replicate that in Lightroom !
fair enough , but in those cases i don't bother switching back to AF to refocus, If I need to after review which frequently i don't, i just do it manually
however 90% of my filter use was ND grad or 81B warm up - both of which are pretty well replicated in lightroom
It's also useful to blur out motion, or or to eliminate people walking around in a busy place or street. This needs to be done at the exposing the image stage, it's too late to do this in post post processing.
.
I know what an ND does :banghead: - and yes its easier to use it at source, however BBF is not an essential part of using it - as you note yourself people have been using them for ages before BBF became available.
PP