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General Photography
Macro
submission for help and critique
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<blockquote data-quote="WayneF" data-source="post: 576669" data-attributes="member: 12496"><p>AF-S and AF-C do control relationship between shutter and focus (their defaults are that AF-S requires focus before shutter will work - it locks focus at half press for the next full press. But AF-C will trigger shutter whether it has focused yet or not - and AF-C will continue trying to focus while you hold shutter down for the next continuous shot, or while half press is held down). Requiring focus first is normally a good thing. AF-S is for normal fixed subjects. AF-C is for continuous shots of a fast moving subject.</p><p></p><p>The 1/60 and f/16 are affected by camera exposure mode, A, S, P, M.... it affects the way automation adjusts them. But in Manual, they stay as what you have set them, however, the meter can be seen in the viewfinder, so you can judge it that way first.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WayneF, post: 576669, member: 12496"] AF-S and AF-C do control relationship between shutter and focus (their defaults are that AF-S requires focus before shutter will work - it locks focus at half press for the next full press. But AF-C will trigger shutter whether it has focused yet or not - and AF-C will continue trying to focus while you hold shutter down for the next continuous shot, or while half press is held down). Requiring focus first is normally a good thing. AF-S is for normal fixed subjects. AF-C is for continuous shots of a fast moving subject. The 1/60 and f/16 are affected by camera exposure mode, A, S, P, M.... it affects the way automation adjusts them. But in Manual, they stay as what you have set them, however, the meter can be seen in the viewfinder, so you can judge it that way first. [/QUOTE]
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