Northwoods Bill wrote in post #14890988
Pardon what I imagine will turn out to be a fairly dumb question:
In a number of posts I read about focusing on something and then composing the shot. Can someone explain the process or point me to a thread that does.
Currently I am placing my focal point over what I want in focus, pressing half way, confirming auto focus and taking the photo. I get the idea I am missing something?
What you're talking about is the "focus and recompose" technique where instead of having the subject positioned always on one of the AF points, you focus, then reframe the shot so that the subject is where you want it to be to make the best composition. Also, this is frequently used when the centre point is more sensitive than the outer points (as is the case on most, if not all cameras) so as to have a better chance of accurate AF. For example, if you're taking a portrait of someone with a fast lens, you may wish to use the centre point as it is more accurate when used with lenses of f2.8 or faster, but you may not want the subject's face to be right in the middle of the frame, so you'd focus on the eyes, then move the camera slightly to position them off centre or whatever.
This however, has the downside of possibly moving the plane of focus sufficiently far to throw the subject out of focus if your DOF is very narrow, and/or your movement too large; when you tilt or turn your camera, as you will when recomposing, the plane of focus moves correspondingly.
TheRisingArms wrote in post #14891031
As long as you don't change the distance from your subject you should be fine.
For the last reason in the reply to the first quote, this is not always correct.