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Thread: Manual or Auto Focus...

  1. #11
    Senior Member
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    Dec 2008
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    Re: Manual or Auto Focus...



    Quote Originally Posted by keller


    I guess i was thinking today when i was at the wedding things were moving so fast that i did nothave time to set the focus point before each shot.
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    I fully, fully agree with others' comments that you should master what you have before looking to upgrade. That said, upgraded cameras offer the ability to choose focus points using a small joystick control that's essentially "always on". It often has to be enabled in menus first, and even then there are some camera-specific things* you want to learn like the back of your hand, but it sure is convenient (and I sure miss it when I grab our Rebel...).


    * On my girlfriend's 40D, using joystick focus-point selection seems to disable the factory-default way of choosing focus points, and as a result I don't know how to tell the camera to auto-select focus points. However, with nine focus points, you can pick any point with only one touch of the joystick. On my 1D Mark III, the factory-default way of choosing focus points stays active, so I can jump to auto-select far quicker (though I never use this). However, with 19 selectable focus points, the center point is the only point that's definitely selectable with one push...I can be "thumbing away" to get the point I want sometimes.
    We're a Canon/Profoto family: five cameras, sixteen lenses, fifteen Profoto lights, too many modifiers.

  2. #12

    Re: Manual or Auto Focus...



    On the 40D, if you enable immediate focus point selection with the joystick, then the button you normally need to press first becomes redundant. So they use that to select the all points active mode.


    As I see it, there are two possible methods to focus on something, then recompose.


    Either you use One Shot AF and the center point, in which case you aim the center point at the target, half-press the trigger (and keep it there), re-compose your shot to cover what you want it to and then press the trigger completely. Note that if you use this method combined with evaluative metering and automatic exposure, then you'll also lock exposure at the same time as you lock focus.


    Or you use Servo AF, move the focusing operation to the AF-ON button (or * on the simpler models) and use the center point. Aim at the interesting part with the center point, press AF-ON until the camera has focused there, let go of the AF-ON button to hold the focus where it is, re-compose and take the picture. In this case you don't lock exposure when half-pressing the trigger, though, even with evaluative metering.


    One Shot AF is better in low light than Servo AF, but apart from that, these two methods are equivalent.


    Now if you need to track a moving target, and now and then take pictures of it, then you need Servo AF and keeping the active focus point on the subject all the time, while you keep the trigger half-pressed or hold the AF-ON button pressed.


    If you want everything covered by the nine focus points in focus, and don't use flash, then you can try the A-DEP setting. It's one of the most bashed modes of them all, but this is actually exactly what it's there for.

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