jszokoli
Well-known
Don't worry, the original poster is likely off taking pictures...
Joe
Joe
That doesn't disqualify others from having a different take on the subject, a take that may be equally valid.
Somehow this thread seems to have derailed into a debate about whether action should be shot using AF with a DSLR. Not really helpful for the first poster who's shooting travel, landscape and architecture, and wondering about the transition from mirrorless autofocus to MF RF.
Speaking for myself... shooting eye AF with fast lenses (85mm f1.4 DG DN or 35mm f1.2) at or nearly wide open was really an eye opener for me. The number of shots with critically focus on the eyes went way up. Without eye AF I've found AF tends to go for the nose and throws the face off slightly. With off center or moving subjects this is even more true. Just the focus and reframe can throw off critical focus when shooting like this.back for the OP, there has been plenty of discussion of af vs mf. More than is really helpful I suspect. A lot of us here generally like mf and there are ways to make it work in all sorts of situations. On the other hand, I was chatting very amicably with a working pro a few weeks ago and he wouldn’t have given up his Sony’s eye af for shooting portraits of clients’ fast moving children. I say we had a very pleasant and amicable chat as he didn’t set out to say his system was better, just that it worked for him. He was intrigued by my film Leica (though if I did his job I’d likely use his kit).
Before getting a Leica I eased into rangefinders, first with the Fujifilm X100S, then with the X-Pro1, then the X-Pro3. They're not rangefinders but they use window finders. At some point, I gradually got into shooting film more and I had a Canonet G-III QL17 and an Olympus 35RC - real rangefinders. These 1970s compacts are not at the same level of sophistication as the Leica M3, but I'm glad to have gotten the experience shooting with them. For anybody shooting film and worried they wouldn't be able to adjust to a rangefinder, I would recommend starting with cheaper fixed lens rangefinders like these before committing to the cost of a Leica. Leicas have a much nicer shooting experience and you will notice it but the basic functions are all the same. Like I said earlier, they're just cameras at the end of the day.The Fuji x-pros and x100 offer a similar view of the world to an rf, but with af. I bought and sold two before reverting to rf. great camera but for me was really an af camera with the window finder and evf for mf.
That 85/1.4 really is something, and the 35/1.2. I don’t have either, but I’m sure they’re much faster to focus accurately than my manual focus Zeiss.Speaking for myself... shooting eye AF with fast lenses (85mm f1.4 DG DN or 35mm f1.2) at or nearly wide open was really an eye opener for me. The number of shots with critically focus on the eyes went way up. Without eye AF I've found AF tends to go for the nose and throws the face off slightly. With off center or moving subjects this is even more true. Just the focus and reframe can throw off critical focus when shooting like this.
My last DSLR was the D700 which had good spot AF. It was better in AF with the 85 1.4D than I could do in MF even with a Katz Eye focus screen.That 85/1.4 really is something, and the 35/1.2. I don’t have either, but I’m sure they’re much faster to focus accurately than my manual focus Zeiss.
Interestingly, I think mirrorless cameras have an advantage over dslr’s at these apertures. Certainly in the earlier days phase detect didn’t accurately focus at f1.4 and I had one body that I couldn’t get to focus any of the lenses I really wanted it to.
I'm not sure how this morphed into a discussion of action photography, but when it comes to subjects like those you've mentioned I would imagine that you would do just fine using a MF rangefinder. Just know that there is no shortage of hype out there when it comes to both rangefinders and Leica cameras.I have been shooting mirrorless autofocus for years, mostly landscape, travel, architecture , but never on a rangefinder. I’m drawn to acquiring a used M10 because so many photographers rave about the shooting experience and image quality. But I also see posts where some go back to AF cameras, after being frustrated by manual focus. How difficult is the transition, and how long does it take to master the Leica rangefinder? Thanks.
As for the distorted image of the skateboarders, IIRC panning gives a smeared image not a blurred image.
As for RF MF as fast or faster than AF, go tell the people who can make a living with a camera. They will be interested to get your input. Poor souls, if they only could learn from the amateurs on this board they would be so much wiser and probably wealthier. You guys had better run and tell them. They will be so grateful for your input, you savvy sages of photography.
We use computers to automate those repetitive tasks in our lives and to eliminate error. Autofocus is an automated function, run by a computer. If autofocus were not as accurate or more accurate it would not be offered because it would be revealed as such with proven data rather than idle chatter. Yes, you can "break the looms" and denounce them but the Luddites are but a footnote in history and almost all our woven fiber today comes from automated mills, because it is better and cheaper. Some folks swoon still over handwoven fabric but not many. You can still do double-entry bookkeeping in a ledger but almost everybody uses spreadsheets at the minimum. You can still write and post letters but most of us do email. Should I go one? It is 2024. Hello?
Speaking for myself... shooting eye AF with fast lenses (85mm f1.4 DG DN or 35mm f1.2) at or nearly wide open was really an eye opener for me. The number of shots with critically focus on the eyes went way up. Without eye AF I've found AF tends to go for the nose and throws the face off slightly. With off center or moving subjects this is even more true. Just the focus and reframe can throw off critical focus when shooting like this.
Landscape is predominently what I do. It's what I love. I have three primary cameras that I use for it:I have been shooting mirrorless autofocus for years, mostly landscape, travel, architecture , but never on a rangefinder. I’m drawn to acquiring a used M10 because so many photographers rave about the shooting experience and image quality. But I also see posts where some go back to AF cameras, after being frustrated by manual focus. How difficult is the transition, and how long does it take to master the Leica rangefinder? Thanks.
The first image- motion blur, look at the seam on the pants- in focus. I was panning with the shot. Even with ISO2500 and F1, slow shutter speeds on these.Tthe first image looks like it iis focused several feet behind the subject. Lights on the left look like the focus point. Middle one is tough to tell due to motion blur, bottom is good.
D700 85 1.4d @1.4 w/AF.
Very interesting. Matches my experience with the school basketball. Is it that the Leica has you looking, with a camera, not looking through a camera? With right eye to the finder maybe that’s part of it.The M9 will be my favourite camera for the past 14 years as of this month, and I've had a lot of practice shooting action sports like boxing and kickboxing in the past four or five years. Having said this, it is not my preferred camera for action - that task is better served with AF cameras like the Panasonic G9 and S5 with fast lenses, and even the Panasonic 24-105 f4 works well for action in good light. For athletics and football, obviously a long zoom on a mirrorless cam is the more appropriate choice.
There are times when I miss the shot with the M9 that I could probably have got with a mirrorless, especially when seeing something interesting but fleeting - the tiny moments focusing manually (I tend to shoot wide open) have caused me to lose images. But for some reason, when shooting with the M9 and Distagon 35 in particular, I get much more interesting and well composed images than when I shoot with any autofocus camera. Perhaps it's the need to be deliberate. I just don't seem to 'see' the same way when I shoot with AF. I never really experienced this with the 5D Mark II and 35L, so it's not a fast 35 thing, either. From what I've experienced, my shoot rate is lower but my hit rate is higher when I shoot with the M9.
As for how difficult it is to transition to a digital rangefinder after using mirrorless cameras: it's not that hard once you get used to manual focus. As others have explained before, get used to just one lens first, and develop muscle memory from the position of the focus tab if the lens has one. Learn to zone focus or hyperfocus if shooting in well lit scenes and you don't need shallow depth of field. Learn to put the focus patch on something like an eye, line or object that will allow you to see when you've achieved focus. It will be frustrating at first, but it will come.
I wasn't complaining about the panning motion blur. I was saying it was preventing evaluating focus. Can't tell if it is front focused or motion blur on that one. Yes, mine has motion blur too, but it is also clearly in focus, just like your third shot.The first image- motion blur, look at the seam on the pants- in focus. I was panning with the shot. Even with ISO2500 and F1, slow shutter speeds on these.
Yes, it is still important. If you are shooting off center eye focus makes sure the camera is focusing on what you want it to be focused on. That is a benefit no matter what aperture you are shooting at. Sometimes we shoot wide open because we need to due to the light, sometimes we do it to highlight the subject more. It is one of the many choices a photographer makes.This is the trend I was into before I sold my Canon 5D and 50L 1.2. No eye AF wasn't really problem.
But lets be honest, is it really this important? Only one eye is in focus or only nose in focus. F1.2, F1.4 taken portraits to me became as special effect "portraits".
I don't see it on paintings or often on classic portraits from photogs I respect.
To me the portrait or street shot is where person is in focus. Not just an eye.
Except I do something on porpoise, like taking street photos at 1/8 shutter speed. 🙂
And then I look at people shots I took with film, no AF cameras... I missed focus few times over thousands. Moving or not.