bensyverson
Well-known
I recently came up with a very fast focusing technique for scale focus cameras, and I can't believe I didn't think of it sooner... My technique in the past has been to first use a shoe-mount rangefinder to get the distance, then set the lens to that distance, and finally use the camera VF to frame the subject. That takes a bit of time.
However, if I'm walking around with a friend and I know I want to grab a portrait, there's a better way to go about it. First, I preset both the lens and the rangefinder to 1.2 meters. Later, when I want to take the shot, I look through the rangefinder, and move the camera closer or further, until the rangefinder images align, then trip the shutter.
Basically, instead of adjusting the rangefinder, you adjust yourself!
This one little trick means I can focus even faster on the scale focus camera than with a "real" rangefinder, because I'm not even touching the focus; I'm just leaning forward or backward slightly. I came up with the number 1.2 m (4 feet) after some testing. Apparently that's the distance I naturally take when doing a candid portrait.
Anyway, that little tip might be obvious to some, but it was a big revelation when I figured it out!
However, if I'm walking around with a friend and I know I want to grab a portrait, there's a better way to go about it. First, I preset both the lens and the rangefinder to 1.2 meters. Later, when I want to take the shot, I look through the rangefinder, and move the camera closer or further, until the rangefinder images align, then trip the shutter.
Basically, instead of adjusting the rangefinder, you adjust yourself!
This one little trick means I can focus even faster on the scale focus camera than with a "real" rangefinder, because I'm not even touching the focus; I'm just leaning forward or backward slightly. I came up with the number 1.2 m (4 feet) after some testing. Apparently that's the distance I naturally take when doing a candid portrait.
Anyway, that little tip might be obvious to some, but it was a big revelation when I figured it out!
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