Which is best
I have been setting the focus points after framing the subject but beginning to think that its unnecessary
Talking about zoo photographs with 100 400 lens static subjects 10 to 30 feet away normally on f 5.6
Pete
Thanks Dale
focus and recompose will make life easier its very fiddly changing the focus points on the 550D
I got into the habit of setting the focus point on my 40D, its very quick to nudge the joystick but have been struggling do do the same with the 550D so focus and recompose is the way to go![]()
ian-83 said:From my understanding you use centre focus point, set up the focus to the object then move the camera to frame the pic then take the pic? Is this right?
focus and recompose is bad practise and can cost you photos, try using narrow depth of field and you will see.
read this and it will save me explaining why.
http://visual-vacations.com/Photography/focus-recompose_sucks.htm
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=106421
focus and recompose is bad practise and can cost you photos, try using narrow depth of field and you will see.
read this and it will save me explaining why.
http://visual-vacations.com/Photography/focus-recompose_sucks.htm
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=106421
I thought focal distance was in a curve, ie everything 6ft away was in focus, not that everything in a plane parrallel to the lens was in focus.
I will play with focus points more![]()
Great example Richard and I know the thread has moved on but you're working with slim margins with those specs.
The OP is talking about f5.6 @ 100-400m at fairly forgiving distances.
HoppyUK said:Yes, absolutely. My point is really that it's only a potential problem in extreme circumstances like this, whereas one of the links posted by TheHat suggests that it's rather more of a general focus-recompose problem (at least the way I read it).
I use focus-recompose with centre point all the time, and never have any issues, as I think most people do. I'm aware of it though, so would take care in a close portrait situation for example. I still say though, when your DoF is measured in mms, it is subject movement and camera movement that's likely to be the main problem.
Edit: Also, you'd never shoot a portrait like that with a 50mm lens (on FF) would you? That's crazy close, like under 2ft away. If you move back and do it properly with a longer lens like a 135 f/2, the angle of movement in recomposing is very substantially reduced to the point that the problem pretty much goes away, and if you're using a 70-200 2.8 zoom, well, it's virtually non-existant.
Richard, would you use focus/recompose shooting wide open or close to with a fast prime? I shoot indoors a lot so I'm pretty close to my subjects.

Thanks for going to the trouble to show that Richard
It does show that at the sort of distances that I am working with focus/recompose should be OK
I am normally 10 to 30 feet away from big cats at the zoo in this case it was cheetah cubs
If I assume that the focus shift at worst case like your example changes the focus by 1.5cm and the depth of field is about 10cm I should be OK
I will never be below F5.6 unless I win the lottery and get the 400 F2.8
Pete
You're welcome Pete, though I'm not sure you're getting the angle bit![]()
When you're close, like under two feet with the mannequin, you have to tilt the camera a lot to focus-recompose with the centre point if you want the subject towards the corner like that. Let's say it's 30 degrees in that example, which is probably pretty close, and at 2ft for the sake of round numbers.
If you move back to 4ft with a 2x longer lens for the same framing, that angle drops to 15 degrees. A longer lens again at 8ft and you're at 7.5 degrees. The focus recompose error is now within the zone of depth of field, even at f/1.8.
You're shooting at 10ft, and at f/5.6 - no problem at all and the focus-rempose shift would be down to a few mm, almost too small to measure and, even if it mattered, you'd have trouble focusing to that kind of accuracy. It's the difference between focusing on the eyeball or the eyelashes!
Compare that amount of error to how much either you or the subject is likely to move, and it's clear where the most likely problem is.

HoppyUK said:It's only a problem at very close range, with very shallow DoF - the combination of a big angle of movement, like maybe 30 degrees in that mannequin shot, and very small margin for error. With greater distance, that angle is dramatically reduced and DoF substatially increased so the problem hardly arises, if ever.
However, if you do find yourself in a very close/shallow DoF situation, you have a few options. Using an outer focus point is one, though in the second mannequin shot, not many cameras have an AF point that far out, in which case you could use the nearest point and then instead of recomposing in camera as you'd ideally like, leave the composition as it is and crop in post. Might have to move back a tad to allow some space around the subject to do that.
Or manual focus, with the subject framed just the way you want it. This is easy if you have a FF camera (they have bigger, brighter focusing screens) and have changed the standard screen for one optimised for manual focusing (they show the true shallow DoF better). If you have a regular crop camera, that's rather more difficult, but possible with a bit of practise.
I have played around with manual focus, but I'm just not quick enough with kids to do it effectively. I asked because I always use the nearest focus point and then crop if necessary. I may have a bit of a play with recomposing again and see what happens in practice.
scottthehat said:focus and recompose is bad practise and can cost you photos, try using narrow depth of field and you will see.
read this and it will save me explaining why.
http://visual-vacations.com/Photography/focus-recompose_sucks.htm
http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=106421
thats what I used to do when I was using my 40D , cant do that on the 550DI tend to just use the four focus points that are closest to where the intersecting 'rule of third' lines are in the frame and with the joystick on my 30d set to select focus points so I can change between them quickly without taking my eye from the viewfinder.

don't think it's been mentioned, but I'm sure I've read that the centre AF point is the most accurate for metering.... in which case focus and recompose would give the most accurate metering?