- Oct 21, 2000
- 14,001
- 4
- 76
Many times I am shooting and while I appreciate shallow depth of field pictures for portraits or to isolate a subject, much of the time I want it to be a long DOF. I want everything to be in focus, in other words.
What is a general value range that would make everything focused? f/8? f/11?
Second, I have this dilemma I need help with. I use a 50mm f/1.8 prime to shoot mostly food or other objects. If I am indoors (not optimal lighting), and I want a wider DOF, I need to raise the aperture to say f/5.6+ The problem is when you raise the aperture, you are making the opening smaller (right?) and as a result, my shutter speed slows down and/or ISO raises. Well I can't exactly handhold a camera very well. The camera naturally wants to use the largest f-value (1.8) which means the cherry on top of my sundae will be sharp and everything else including the ice cream 2 cm below will be blurry.
What can I do?
Thanks.
What is a general value range that would make everything focused? f/8? f/11?
Second, I have this dilemma I need help with. I use a 50mm f/1.8 prime to shoot mostly food or other objects. If I am indoors (not optimal lighting), and I want a wider DOF, I need to raise the aperture to say f/5.6+ The problem is when you raise the aperture, you are making the opening smaller (right?) and as a result, my shutter speed slows down and/or ISO raises. Well I can't exactly handhold a camera very well. The camera naturally wants to use the largest f-value (1.8) which means the cherry on top of my sundae will be sharp and everything else including the ice cream 2 cm below will be blurry.
What can I do?
Thanks.