Posts Tagged "DOF"

forum

Night Photography 2 – overcoming the darkness

Posted by on Nov 27, 2009notice in Photography Techniques | 6 comments

So you have the night photography bug. You sit twiddling your thumbs in the daylight hours waiting for the light to fade so that you can go out and leave your camera perfectly still with its shutter open for many tens of minutes. You are not...

Read More
advertise

Photography techniques – Hyperfocal distance

Posted by on Oct 27, 2009

guidelines
in Photography Techniques | 5 comments

Hyperfocal distance is the art in photography of achieving as much sharpness as possible throughout the image. In other words, it involves careful focusing adjustments to ensure that objects close to the camera and objects in the distance all have the same sharp focus, but more accurately, the hyperfocal distance is that point of focus where things are in focus from a point half way between you and the focal point all the way onward to infinity. Hyper-focal distance is more of a landscape photographer’s concept. When shooting landscapes, I never use auto-focus. Although the Hyperfocal...

Read More

Photography techniques – focus stacking

Posted by on Aug 31, 2009 in Photography Techniques, Photoshop Techniques | 5 comments

This articles looks at a lengthy and complicated procedure to render every part of a scene with perfect focus. the aim is to achieve a high depth of field (DOF) whilst maintaining the high quality of your lens’ sweet-spot. The main challenge is, maybe, deciding what situations exactly would require this sort of treatment. This technique is popular for macro work, where the DOF is usually too shallow to capture all the sharp detail in a subject. Landscape could benefit as there is a requirement for sharpness throughout the scene. Usually an f/16 and careful hyper-focal calculations will...

Read More
help

Composition – following and breaking the rules

Posted by on Aug 19, 2009 in Photography Techniques | 0 comments

The rules of composition are guidelines for producing a well designed image. ‘Guidelines’ are probably a better description than ‘rules’ as they just help us as a kind of starting point. Do not break the rules until you are an expert at following them. You need to understand how they work and how they help you create great compositions. Learn the rules and then break them only if it will create a better image than if you followed them. Rule of thirds Divide your frame into 9 equal parts and the lines and intersection become powerful places to place areas of...

Read More