- Jul 29, 2000
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So one of the more generally accepted methods of nailing focus is to focus your camera on someone's eye using the center AF point (the most accurate AF point in all cameras), and then recomposing after the focus has locked. Doesn't this introduce a certain amount of focus error into every single shot?
This error is definitely smaller the farther away you are from someone, but if you are not physically moving the location of the camera and just changing the angle of your camera during recomposition, you are going to be back-focused a little bit on every shot. This is because the distance from your camera sensor to the eye is going to be longer than the distance from the camera sensor to the chest or general body area of your subject.
Are there better methods out there? How about focusing on the nose then recomposing? I've typically not even gone for the recompose and just focus on the body depending on their body in relation to their face, but this has led to some missed focus as well.
This error is definitely smaller the farther away you are from someone, but if you are not physically moving the location of the camera and just changing the angle of your camera during recomposition, you are going to be back-focused a little bit on every shot. This is because the distance from your camera sensor to the eye is going to be longer than the distance from the camera sensor to the chest or general body area of your subject.
Are there better methods out there? How about focusing on the nose then recomposing? I've typically not even gone for the recompose and just focus on the body depending on their body in relation to their face, but this has led to some missed focus as well.
