John Camp
Well-known
I just started messing with rangefinders about last Christmas after decades of using Nikons (which I still use and like.) The rangefinder was simply better for some new kinds of things I am doing, especially on streets and in markets. But today I saw a shot I wanted to take -- new mown hay in evening light -- and normally would have used the Nikon and a zoom. I only had the R-D1 with me, so I used that, and I noticed a problem that I've encountered a couple times before.
What do you do when there are no edges to focus on? I was trying to focus fairly close in, letting the distant part of the photo drift out of focus (to be paired with another photo in which the distant part was sharp.) But I couldn't find anything to focus on; nothing that the rangefinder edge could cut across. I got it eventually, but it wasn't quick. Is there any technique for this, other than looking at the focus-guide numbers on the lens?
I've had the same problem with what I call "mini-landscapes" -- chunks of land that are eight or ten feet across, a jumble of grass, weeds and wildflowers. I may want to focus with critical sharpness on, say, a flower the size of a quarter, in a chunk eight-feet across. The flower's too small to focus on and everything else is a jumble of weed and grass...
Anything to do other than look at the guide numbers? How do you focus quickly? This with a 50mm or 35mm Leica lens...
JC
What do you do when there are no edges to focus on? I was trying to focus fairly close in, letting the distant part of the photo drift out of focus (to be paired with another photo in which the distant part was sharp.) But I couldn't find anything to focus on; nothing that the rangefinder edge could cut across. I got it eventually, but it wasn't quick. Is there any technique for this, other than looking at the focus-guide numbers on the lens?
I've had the same problem with what I call "mini-landscapes" -- chunks of land that are eight or ten feet across, a jumble of grass, weeds and wildflowers. I may want to focus with critical sharpness on, say, a flower the size of a quarter, in a chunk eight-feet across. The flower's too small to focus on and everything else is a jumble of weed and grass...
Anything to do other than look at the guide numbers? How do you focus quickly? This with a 50mm or 35mm Leica lens...
JC