Monday, October 27, 2014

Posted by Unknown |

Hyperfocal focus is a photographic technique used to ensure a nearby tree is in focus as well as the distant mountain range. When a camera is focused on an object, the area which will be in focus is determined by the aperture setting of the lens, the focal length of the lens and the distance the object is from the camera. About half of the area in focus will be in front of the lens focus point and the rest behind. This is known as the depth of field. As the aperture is stopped down to a smaller opening, the depth of field gets longer and a larger area will be in focus. When the depth of field is large enough, everything behind the subject will be in focus and a portion of the area between you and the subject will be in focus. If autofocus is used to focus on the distant mountain range, approximately half the distance to the mountain range will be in focus, leaving a lot of fuzzy objects between the camera and the mountain range.

Instructions

    1

    Download a hyperfocal chart from nikonians.org, dofmaster.com or site of your choice (see Resources).

    2

    Set up your camera, preferably on a tripod.

    3

    Set the camera for manual zoom and aperture priority.

    4

    Compose your photograph by adjusting angle, elevation and zoom level (focal length).

    5

    Estimate the distance to the closest object that is needed to be in focus. Double this distance to give you the hyperfocal distance.

    6

    Set focus point to hyperfocal distance using distance ring on lens.

    7

    Pick a value for the aperture from the hyperfocal chart based on the focal length used and the hyperfocal distance calculated. Set aperture to value from chart.

    8

    Verify desired composition using camera Depth of Field (DOF) preview capability.


Hyperfocal focus is a photographic technique used to ensure a nearby tree is in focus as well as the distant mountain range. When a camera is focused on an object, the area which will be in focus is determined by the aperture setting of the lens, the focal length of the lens and the distance the object is from the camera. About half of the area in focus will be in front of the lens focus point and the rest behind. This is known as the depth of field. As the aperture is stopped down to a smaller opening, the depth of field gets longer and a larger area will be in focus. When the depth of field is large enough, everything behind the subject will be in focus and a portion of the area between you and the subject will be in focus. If autofocus is used to focus on the distant mountain range, approximately half the distance to the mountain range will be in focus, leaving a lot of fuzzy objects between the camera and the mountain range.

Enhance your photography skill,The Top Secret Photography Techniques

.

Instructions

    1

    Download a hyperfocal chart from nikonians.org, dofmaster.com or site of your choice (see Resources).

    2

    Set up your camera, preferably on a tripod.

    3

    Set the camera for manual zoom and aperture priority.

    4

    Compose your photograph by adjusting angle, elevation and zoom level (focal length).

    5

    Estimate the distance to the closest object that is needed to be in focus. Double this distance to give you the hyperfocal distance.

    6

    Set focus point to hyperfocal distance using distance ring on lens.

    7

    Pick a value for the aperture from the hyperfocal chart based on the focal length used and the hyperfocal distance calculated. Set aperture to value from chart.

    8

    Verify desired composition using camera Depth of Field (DOF) preview capability.



  • Prime Lens vs Ultra Wide Angle Lens - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7Ju_QfkEhs

    This is a comparison I did of my Canon EF 50mm f/1.2 L USM Lens and my Tokina 11mm - 16mm F/2.8 ATX Pro DX Autofocus Zoom Super wide angle Lens. You can ...


  • How to take good pictures with the camera you have - Illustrated ...

    www.easyphotography.info/tips-on-how-to-take-good-pictures-using...

    FOCUS!!! and how to minimize the delay between your pressing the button and the camera actually taking the picture From the cheapest point-and-shoots to the most ...


  • Hyperfocal Distance

    www.dofmaster.com/hyperfocal.html

    The concept of hyperfocal distance is easy to understand: focus a lens at the hyperfocal distance and everything in the photograph from some near distance to


  • Art Photography - How To Information Page 1 eHow

    www.ehow.com Arts & Entertainment Art

    Don't just sit there scratching your head, find useful info on Art Photography on eHow. Get essential tips and learn more about everything from How to Shoot a Raw ...


  • How to Understand Your Digital SLR: 16 Steps (with Pictures)

    www.wikihow.com Digital Photography Digital Cameras

    How to Understand Your Digital SLR. When they were first introduced, digital SLR cameras were enormously expensive and a tool for professionals only. Since then,


  • How to Get Shallow Depth of Field in Your Digital Photos

    digital-photography-school.com/how-to-get-shallow-depth-of-field...

    Ive been taking a lot of portrait shots of our kids lately with my husbands DSLR (Canon EOS 20D) and Ive noticed that on some shots that I take the ...


  • How to Get the Best Results from Ultra-Wide Lenses

    digital-photography-school.com/how-to-get-the-best-results-from...

    These days, most kit lenses on consumer DSLRs are wide-angle. 18mm on an APS-C sensor camera (or 27mm in old 35mm speak) is wide enough for most occasions.


  • How to Use Wide Angle Lenses Effectively - Nature, Wildlife and ...

    www.naturephotographers.net/articles0403/dw0403-1.html

    Most folks think a wide-angle lens should just be used to capture big scenes that normal lenses can't take in. In part this is true, wide-angle lenses do have large ...

0 comments:

Post a Comment