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Thread started 11 Jun 2008 (Wednesday) 09:19
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landscape, geeting everything including the forground tack sharp

 
simmonsrandal
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Jun 11, 2008 09:19 |  #1

when shooting landscape photos, what the best way to get everything tack sharp. if i shoot as say f8, sometimes my foreground objects aren't as sharp as i think they could be. Then, my understanding is if i go up to say f16, that won't be as sharp as f8.

thoughts or advice?




  
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TheHoff
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Jun 11, 2008 09:32 |  #2

F/11 is usually as good as f/8. When you go to 16 or above you run into diffraction of the light (which is worse on a crop sensor). So go to f/11 first.

Next, the trick is to realize that 1/3 to 1/2 of your available sharp depth of field falls in FRONT of the point of focus. So if you focus at infinity you are wasting the back half of your plane of sharp focus. You should focus at about 1/3 to 1/2 into the scene -- not at the front and not at the back. This will maximize the sharpness throughout the image.


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sgogula
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Jun 11, 2008 09:38 |  #3

I shoot between f8-f11 and focus on the foreground.


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TheHoff
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Jun 11, 2008 09:39 |  #4

Also, even if you have to go to f/16 or f/22, a shot with some diffraction but everything in focus is better than a shot with little diffraction but a foreground out of focus.


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chauncey
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Jun 11, 2008 18:24 as a reply to  @ TheHoff's post |  #5

Run a google search for "Helicon focus stacking".

You take multiple images and plug them in to the software and it coughs out a crispy critter, front to back.


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simmonsrandal
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Jun 11, 2008 23:36 |  #6

chauncey wrote in post #5704945 (external link)
Run a google search for "Helicon focus stacking".

You take multiple images and plug them in to the software and it coughs out a crispy critter, front to back.

that fly example on the helicon website is insane.




  
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Boucher
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Jun 11, 2008 23:40 as a reply to  @ simmonsrandal's post |  #7

Want an automated way of finding out?

here you go :)

http://www.dofmaster.c​om/dofjs.html (external link)

Its pretty self explanatory..


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landscape, geeting everything including the forground tack sharp
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