I used to think that my 300D with 18-55mm couldn't focus worth a damn. I realized what I was doing wrong, and changed my style (using centre focus point only) and most of my problems went away. Then I was thrust into shooting in really low/poor light conditions, and tons of indoors. I quickly learned what to look for in regards to Aperture/Shutterspeeds/ISO to get back lost shots from camera shake.
Then all the gear was stolen. Now I've got the 20D, and thought for some reason my pictures would end up 10X better, but it just doesn't work that way, does it. Still more learning ahead.
Another Bridal shower to shoot. More low light. No external flash. Now using the 20D and 17-40L. All the pictures turned out yellow/pink, and all seem blurred. Not even as sharp as what I was getting with the 300D and 18-55mm.
I've figured out the yellow/pink problem. Quick lesson in setting White Balance. Quick lesson in learning why you might want to shoot in RAW. Figured out there is no need to jack ISO up to 1600 when using the built in flash, since it defaults to f4@1/60 regardless of ISO level. The 1600 just seems to roughen/soften all edges and make the entire scene a little blurred in an ugly sort of way.
Or is it me and my Centre Focus Point method of obtaining focus? You see, almost all the photo's were of groups of people or couples. Centering the shot would always have the Centre Focus point fall on a background object, so I always would focus on 1 persons face, and then recompose the shot. Is this wrong? How 'out' of focus can a shot become by using this method? Is there a general rule on distances to subject where you do not want to use this method? Or is it just that the 17-40L isn't the hottest lens when in a low light situation?
My problem is sharpness or lack thereof. I've taken camera shake out of the equation since I'm getting 1/60th speeds. That leaves me with ISO, and/or Focusing technique as being the culprit. I just don't know what to think anymore.



