Johan Eickmeyer
November 12th, 2010, 02:33 PM
Hey Guys!
I have a Canon 60D I am using for everything, including video.
I also have a 60mm 2.8 EFS, which is proving to be a really nice lens to start with.
One important thing for me to master, is focusing at all times.
What are some good exercises to do in order to get your hand and eyes tuned to it?
Right now, I am placing object like soup bottles and cans in my home at varying distances and to the sides. I am holding the camera mounted to a tripod for a little stability. The camera alone is hard enough to keep stable, without focusing.
My first test is to hold the camera steady and focus on various objects as fast as possible with only one shot at each, not hunting back and forth. If I miss it from a long focus pull, then I try over again. I want to be able to see the distance from my camera to the object and know exactly how much to pull for sharp and quick focus.
My second test is to move the camera around a lot and try to keep objects in focus. This is proving to be the most difficult one to master, but damn does it look good when everything is moving in the frame but the one spot that is perfectly in focus and stable. This doubles as a stability test in keeping objects in frame and with good composition.
My third test is to move the camera around while snapping to different objects. One cool type of shot I have learned, but not mastered, is to snap focus to things off screen (HARD!!!) and then pan into them right as the focus hits tack sharp.
My fourth test is to get smooth focus pulls from 1:1 macro to infinity. With a 170 deg focus ring, this is tough! I have only one shot that I consider even slightly close to smooth from stop to stop.
Focus pulling is some of the most difficult hand-eye coordination I have ever done. I play a lot of twitchy video games and was pretty good at baseball. I like challenges, especially when I get a chance to prove I am better at focusing than the best AF systems.
Any thoughts on what else I should be practicing? I want to be a focusing pulling bad-ass. :)
I will post up some samples once I get better subjects to focus on, and hopefully you guys (with far more experience) will be able to help me get better. Then you can hire me! LoL.
I have a Canon 60D I am using for everything, including video.
I also have a 60mm 2.8 EFS, which is proving to be a really nice lens to start with.
One important thing for me to master, is focusing at all times.
What are some good exercises to do in order to get your hand and eyes tuned to it?
Right now, I am placing object like soup bottles and cans in my home at varying distances and to the sides. I am holding the camera mounted to a tripod for a little stability. The camera alone is hard enough to keep stable, without focusing.
My first test is to hold the camera steady and focus on various objects as fast as possible with only one shot at each, not hunting back and forth. If I miss it from a long focus pull, then I try over again. I want to be able to see the distance from my camera to the object and know exactly how much to pull for sharp and quick focus.
My second test is to move the camera around a lot and try to keep objects in focus. This is proving to be the most difficult one to master, but damn does it look good when everything is moving in the frame but the one spot that is perfectly in focus and stable. This doubles as a stability test in keeping objects in frame and with good composition.
My third test is to move the camera around while snapping to different objects. One cool type of shot I have learned, but not mastered, is to snap focus to things off screen (HARD!!!) and then pan into them right as the focus hits tack sharp.
My fourth test is to get smooth focus pulls from 1:1 macro to infinity. With a 170 deg focus ring, this is tough! I have only one shot that I consider even slightly close to smooth from stop to stop.
Focus pulling is some of the most difficult hand-eye coordination I have ever done. I play a lot of twitchy video games and was pretty good at baseball. I like challenges, especially when I get a chance to prove I am better at focusing than the best AF systems.
Any thoughts on what else I should be practicing? I want to be a focusing pulling bad-ass. :)
I will post up some samples once I get better subjects to focus on, and hopefully you guys (with far more experience) will be able to help me get better. Then you can hire me! LoL.