Issues with Out of Focus

Mike D90

Senior Member
I know this is another late reply but I would suggest to change your aperture to F/8 instead of f/6.7. At f/6.7 your DOF is so narrow it is easy to have out of focus areas. Focus on the eyes/ beak area of the bird. You want the eyes focused even if nothing else is.
 

Redtail55

Senior Member
So I went out today and shot a few pics with my camera at F8 and ended up with mostly out of focus shots again. I've tried AF-S , AF-C , high ISO to get high shutter speeds , making sure I'm focusing on the birds head and body and nothing seems to get me enough shots that are in focus when i download them to Aperture to look at them. NOT sure what else to do. I don't want to carry around a tripod or monopod every time I go out to take pictures.
 

Mike D90

Senior Member
So I went out today and shot a few pics with my camera at F8 and ended up with mostly out of focus shots again. I've tried AF-S , AF-C , high ISO to get high shutter speeds , making sure I'm focusing on the birds head and body and nothing seems to get me enough shots that are in focus when i download them to Aperture to look at them. NOT sure what else to do. I don't want to carry around a tripod or monopod every time I go out to take pictures.

Can't much use a tripod on birds anyway unless they are completely still. Can you post a couple of the examples with EXIF?
 

Dave_W

The Dude
Can't much use a tripod on birds anyway unless they are completely still. Can you post a couple of the examples with EXIF?

I use a tripod for my bird shots.

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Nevertheless, I suspect the OP's problem is tuning. Having to have your lenses tuned to your camera is very common. Why Nikon doesn't give these consumer cameras the same ability to tune lenses like pro-sumer and pro level cameras, I'll never know. For the D3200, you'll need to contact Nikon and they'll give you a specific test to determine whether or not you need tuning. If it does need tuning, you'll send the camera in with your lenses and they'll tune them for you.
 

Scott Murray

Senior Member
With BIF focus on the part where the neck joins the body this is inline with the eyes most of the time and a larger area to focus on.
 

Redtail55

Senior Member
With BIF focus on the part where the neck joins the body this is inline with the eyes most of the time and a larger area to focus on.

This is what I try to do but it's hard when the camera doesn't lock on to the subject and focus quick enough before the bird is gone out of the viewfinder.
 

Redtail55

Senior Member
How does one check for a back focus issue ? Is this a camera issue or a lens issue or can it be both ?


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