Tuesday, 14 June 2016

Focus Points

  With the use of the focus points on my camera, I was able to select the area within the view finder that I wanted to keep on focus, and the rest to be blurred. The use of this mode is very effective as it gives you free reign over your macro and tilt shift shots.

  Some examples of these points of focus in actions are below.  From here we see that the focus points are towards the bottom of the photograph.  As you look further down the post, you see that I changed the focus points to higher positions within the view finder.  This shifted the focus to other parts of the photograph.






  This photograph below shows the photograph when I left the focus points untouched;  You can see that the photograph is more in focus on the whole that the others.  This is because the focus was spread out around 15 different points of focus.


  The Focus point in this photograph is blatantly obvious, and it just shows how much using these focus points can help you take stunning macro shots.


  With this one I switched the focus points to the left hand side instead to get a different perspective on the scenery.


  Going back to the same idea with having everything in focus, I left the focus points untouched, and by doing so, I was able to capture this photograph which is all in focus;  Not just a small sections of it.

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