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Photography Q&A
How to capture this kind of photo in sharp focus?
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<blockquote data-quote="blackstar" data-source="post: 759270" data-attributes="member: 47518"><p>Thanks, BF. D3500 gives 11 points 3D focusing option. I may try that next time. But I don't like 3D focusing when shooting stationary wildlife as focusing point may drift or shift to side elements leaving main object UN-focused. This is a continuous scene from stationary to moving. Doubt how it will work when scene changes?</p><p></p><p>Interesting to read your mentioning about tracking focus as detecting moving direction at horizontal, vertical, or diagonal. It seems to cover 2-dimention only (x-axis, y-axis, x-y line). In the case of this bird-fly-to-you scene, z-axis is the key; it's like the bird does not move around much on x-y plane (except its wings), but fast move on z-axis (head, body become bigger and bigger). Does it make sense?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="blackstar, post: 759270, member: 47518"] Thanks, BF. D3500 gives 11 points 3D focusing option. I may try that next time. But I don't like 3D focusing when shooting stationary wildlife as focusing point may drift or shift to side elements leaving main object UN-focused. This is a continuous scene from stationary to moving. Doubt how it will work when scene changes? Interesting to read your mentioning about tracking focus as detecting moving direction at horizontal, vertical, or diagonal. It seems to cover 2-dimention only (x-axis, y-axis, x-y line). In the case of this bird-fly-to-you scene, z-axis is the key; it's like the bird does not move around much on x-y plane (except its wings), but fast move on z-axis (head, body become bigger and bigger). Does it make sense? [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
How to capture this kind of photo in sharp focus?
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