End of spring colors in Burgundy
I still find it difficult to control focusing with my 350D kit lens. For instance, I wanted this image to be as sharp as possible from foreground to background, so I shot it at f/36 and tried to focus near the hyperfocal distance (there’s no infinity focus mark on the lens), yet I’m not completely satisfied with the result; too many zones are slightly out of focus (this is not obvious in the web-sized picture) and no amount of digital sharpening can overcome this.
How do you do? Do you have any tips regarding sharp focusing? Any help would be greatly appreciated… ![]()
Publiée le 15 juin 2005.
Tags : Canon EF-S 18-55, Canon EOS 350D, Paysage.
Commentaires
chiaroscuro le 16 juin 2005 #1
You probably don’t want to be using as small of an aperture as f/36 to shoot landscapes because you will get a fuzzy image due to diffraction effects. See http://www.bobatkins.com/photography/technical/diffraction.html
Diana le 16 juin 2005 #2
relaxing shot, great place!
marc le 17 juin 2005 #3
Not a knock on the lens at all, but you probably won’t get tack-sharp focus throughout with it either, it’s just not that calibre of lens.
chris le 25 juin 2005 #4
The kit lens isn’t sharp. That said, I’ve found f8-16 works best for landscapes. Always mount the camera on a tripod to get the best sharpness possible. I also find 50mm f1.8 and 28mm f2.8 lenses are a great improvement over the kit lens…if you can deal with the fixed-focal length (which I find challenging but rewarding–I like to move my feet).
