How to obtain more than 1 focus.


Amateur108

New Member
Hi,

I have done a search on the forum, but no answers were found.

I took a shot of 2 persons seated about 2-3 metres away from each other (distance from lens are equal though), however, only 1 person's face was in focus.
Read from dpreview that when the subjects are in the same plane, they'll be in focus. But this doesn't happen to mine.
I use a D7000 by the way.

Any help will be appreciated. Thanks !
 

Amateur108 said:
Hi,

I have done a search on the forum, but no answers were found.

I took a shot of 2 persons seated about 2-3 metres away from each other (distance from lens are equal though), however, only 1 person's face was in focus.
Read from dpreview that when the subjects are in the same plane, they'll be in focus. But this doesn't happen to mine.
I use a D7000 by the way.

Any help will be appreciated. Thanks !

Show your pic with exif data, it will be easier to guide you.
Some information to feed you first, how do u determine the subjects are in the same plane?
How are you positioning your camera towards the 2 subjects?
What is the distance from the camera to these 2 subjects and what is the focal length and aperture size use.
These informations will help to answer your doubt. The facts are right, just that is the situation following the assumptions correct.
 

What was your settings used?
 

DSC_0325.jpg


P mode
focal length 36mm
f-stop: f/4.2
shutter speed: 1/8
exp compensation -0.7

Both seated on same sofa, so will be on the same plane.
 

i think i know why. the focus point was not on either 1 subject.
 

Actually I don't see anything sharp in the picture. I suspect there is camera shake, and the person moved his head as well; for the relatively slow shutter speed used (1/8 seconds), that is to be expected.

You should bump up the ISO.
 

1/8s shutter speed? no doubt any movement made by the subjects or your hand/camera would cause them to appear as a blur in the image. if you look carefully, the guy on the left isn't sharp as well. it's called motion blur.

read up more on shutter speed and how it affects your images.
 

Actually I don't see anything sharp in the picture. I suspect there is camera shake, and the person moved his head as well; for the relatively slow shutter speed used (1/8 seconds), that is to be expected.

You should bump up the ISO.

Thanks. Will try again. Was taken at iso 200.
So assuming all settings are ok, if i were to focus on 1 subject, the one beside him will also be in focus ?
Thanks
 

Thanks. Will try again. Was taken at iso 200.
So assuming all settings are ok, if i were to focus on 1 subject, the one beside him will also be in focus ?
Thanks

It should not be too OOF.

If you are worried, F/8 will ensure that both are sharp. The D7K is quite ok for higher ISO up to perhaps ISO1600, why are you limiting your ISO so heavily? ISO800 would not be a problem.
 

It should not be too OOF.

If you are worried, F/8 will ensure that both are sharp. The D7K is quite ok for higher ISO up to perhaps ISO1600, why are you limiting your ISO so heavily? ISO800 would not be a problem.

Ermm, i try to limit my ISO so as to ensure quality...kiasu i guess. haha
 

Amateur108 said:
Thanks. Will try again. Was taken at iso 200.
So assuming all settings are ok, if i were to focus on 1 subject, the one beside him will also be in focus ?
Thanks

Why did you choose iso200 for an indoor shot ah? Any reason? Just curious.
 

Ermm, i try to limit my ISO so as to ensure quality...kiasu i guess. haha
what kind of quality can you get if the photos is not sharp in the first place?


obviously the person moved during the exposure, the 1/8 shutter speed just confirmed this.
 

Amateur108 said:
Hi, cos it was very well lit.

From the picture, plus the 1/8. The room was not well lit at all.... :dunno:
 

to you, it might be well-lit. to the camera's metering, however, it might be other-wise.

your exposure compensation was -0.7. was that done intentionally to increase the shutter speed from lower than 1s?
 

Ermm, i try to limit my ISO so as to ensure quality...kiasu i guess. haha

Then you are basically slapping yourself.. see camera nowadays have quite decent ISO management up till at least 1600..Especially on D7000...1600 is no sweat. OK there might be some noise..but would u rather have some noise but sharp pic.. or a totally OOF..blur shot.
You get the idea? Now you decide.
 

catchlights said:
judging on the skin tone, this photo is underexposed.

TS mentioned that he shot in P mode with -0.7 exposure compensation.

I don't know why he did that, but that may explain the under exposed shot.
 

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