I really appreciate the advice and ideas. It think the problem I;m having is I don't really understand the places you pick for focus. This is when hands on with someone showing you what to do at an actual photoshoot would be very helpful. A face-to-face training class. As far as picking 1/3 down, that comes from shooting 35mm and MF which have no bellows focusing. Interestingly, my Mamiya RB67 has bellows. I wonder if I could try your aperture method with it?
Alan,
I'm back now. I was busy yesterday hanging photo exhibitions for the First Friday Art Walk openings here in town. To your question:
Let me give you a couple of examples, increasing in complexity, and see if we can clear things up.
First, let's look at a simple scene: A flat field with a barn (that's all, no trees no fences, no nothing). We set up the camera a hundred feet or so from the barn. We want everything in the image sharp. Here are the ways you can make the image using the near-far method I suggest.
Option 1 - No Tilt: Keep the camera in zero position. Find the nearest point (that would be the field in the foreground at the bottom of the image) and the farthest point, likely the horizon line behind the barn. Focus on these to points, noting their position on the camera bed. Now position the focus exactly halfway between the two points on the camera bed. This is always the best position for getting both near and far in the DoF, with or without movements. Now, if you're like me, you know the focus spread in mm between the near and far focus points, so you consult your table and choose the appropriate f-stop. Stop down and make the image. (Or, stop down while watching the ground glass till everything is sharp and then add a stop.) This is basically what you do with any camera without movements.
Option 2 - Using Back Tilt: Same scenario except we decide to use the back tilt to make the focus spread less than in the above example so we can use a larger aperture (which gets us a faster shutter speed and avoids diffraction degradation). We need two points in the scene, one near and one far, to use as reference points for applying the tilt (these are NOT points we use for finding focus spread!). Let's choose a very close foreground point and a point halfway up the wall of the barn to define our PoSF. We apply the tilt so that both these points are in sharp focus with the lens wide open (if you can use your asymmetrical tilt, fine, if not then use another method). Now, you can visualize that PoSF as starting on the ground not far from the camera position at the point you used for the near reference point and then extending to intersect the barn at the halfway point, and then on to the sky somewhere above the horizon. You can see that some things in the scene do not lie on the PoSF; some are above it (the top of the barn) and some are below it (the ground where it meets the base of the barn and even the horizon. Still, you want all those things in focus. By making the bellows longer, i.e., focusing closer, you can bring the top of the barn into focus. Great! There's nothing higher than that, so this becomes your "near" focus point for finding the focus spread (it's near because you focused nearer, even though the top of the barn lies above the PoSF - we're defining "near" and "far" by using the bellows extension; longer = nearer; shorter = farther). Note the position of the focus on the camera bed. Now we look for the "far." It will likely be the spot where the ground meets the base of the barn. Focus on that by shortening the bellows (shorter = farther) till it's sharp and note that position on your camera bed. At this point, I determine the focus spread, i.e., the change in distance between the near and far positions on the bellows. Note that distance and remember it. Now, position your focus exactly halfway between the "near" and "far" positions (this is always the best spot). Choose your optimum f-stop by consulting the table or do the stop down and watch routine and start to make the photo. ----- But wait! We just noticed that by tilting the back, we threw the perspective on the barn way out and now it looks like its falling over backward! We don't want that so...
Option 3 - Using Front Tilt: To keep the verticals on the barn parallel in the photograph, we need the back level and plumb, so we remove our back tilt and get the back set straight again. We still want the PoSF to be where it was in Option 2, so we apply front tilt to do the same thing. We use the same two reference points for applying the tilt. You simply have to deal with whatever kind of tilts are on the front standard (more later about tilts). Tilt till both of your reference points are in sharp focus. Now you have the tilt right, but you still need focus spread and focus placement, so, using the same two focus points as above, find the focus spread, note the distance, place focus halfway between, choose the f-stop from the table (or stop down while watching the ground glass...) and make the shot. Now you have nice straight verticals!
Now let's complicate things a bit. Same scene except now you have a picket fence that is about 15 feet from the camera position (i.e., in the middle foreground); otherwise, the scene is the same. You can use the same two reference points for applying the tilt, so do that and apply the tilt. The PoSF lies in the scene exactly as before, the only thing different is that the fence is there. The PoSF intersects the fence somewhere between the top and bottom of the fence pickets. Now you go about finding focus spread in a similar manner as before, but now you've got the fence to consider. So find that "near" point at the top of the barn, but check the top of the pickets in the foreground too (they're above the PoSF too and qualify as "nearer" the camera than the PoSF. You may well find that you need to focus even longer to get the tops of the pickets in sharp focus. If so, then that position becomes your "near" instead of the top of the barn. Now find the "far" The spot where the ground meets the base of the barn should work here too unless you used a different near reference point (the ground was all sharp in the first example). So far so good, it's just that you have a bit greater focus spread in order to get enough DoF to get the tops of the fence pickets sharp enough. So use that new focus spread, position the focus halfway between it and use the new distance to choose a smaller f-stop from the table (or just stop down watching the ground glass - you'll have to stop down more in this case than before).
When you have a lot of objects in the foreground that are tall, at some point tilting has no more value. If, from your viewpoint, the fence reaches almost to the top of the barn, then tilting won't help at all. Just make the photo without movements. But, if the fence only covers half of the barn in the image, then tilting will likely enable you to stop down less.
Can I complicate things more? Let's take the above scenario with picket fence and barn. When I set up for such a shot, I recognize that either the top of the barn or the tops of the pickets will be the "near" point for both applying tilt and finding focus spread. So, to speed things up, I'll start by using the top of the pickets and the top of the barn as reference points to apply my tilt. Once I have my tilt applied, the PoSF lies in the scene touching those points; there's nothing "nearer" because nothing else lies above the PoSF. So now I've applied tilt
and found my "near" focus point in one, easy, operation. Now I just need to find the far (ground at the base of the barn), note the focus spread and proceed as above. This is a handy shortcut.
A few words about applying tilt. Even with asymmetrical tilts like you have on your back standard, it is not as easy as it could be if you don't have a reference point for applying the tilt that neatly aligns with the tilt axis line. You've found that using front rise/fall to position a reference point on the axis line works
as long as you haven't tilted the front standard. But even that has its limitations. The other option is to "guesstimate" where the focus should be, i.e., focus the axis line on "thin air" about where you think the PoSF should be by first focusing on something not in the PoSF and then tweaking focus by about how much you think is necessary. Then you tilt and see if you can get your reference points both in focus. If one comes into focus before the other, then find the tilt positions for the two reference points and then set the tilt halfway between. Both points will be out of focus then, so refocus and see if they both are sharp. If not, repeat the above with smaller changes and see if it's better. A couple of iterations should do the trick. With practice, this gets really fast.
With center axis tilts (think of them as "symmetrical tilts"), the method is the same. If you have a reference point on the center axis line, great. Use that and tilt till your other reference point(s) are sharp (I like three reference points when working with axis tilts, one in the center and one on each side). The same iterative approach works here if you can't get a reference point on the axis line.
With base tilts, the act of tilting refocused the camera (it changes the bellows draw because the whole standard moves in the direction of the tilt). In 90% of cases, we tilt the back backward or the front forward, so when applying base tilt, the bellows lengthens and the camera focus is closer. So, we have to refocus to compensate. Because the top of the standard moves farther than the bottom when using base tilts, the following procedure works best:
Find a couple of reference points, one near, one far. Now focus on whichever point is closest to the bottom of the ground glass. In 90% of cases this will be the far. (Everyone always says, "focus on the far; tilt for the near," but this is not really true - it should be "focus at the bottom of the ground glass; tilt for the top.") At any rate, once you've focused on that first point at the bottom of the ground glass, tilt slowly, while watching both reference points. The point at the bottom of the ground glass will go out of focus while the out-of-focus point at the top of the ground glass will start to get sharper. Go slow. (I don't use a loupe doing this, but I do like my 3-diopter reading glasses.) Tilt till both points are equally unsharp. It's important that you don't overshoot; in other words don't go past the point where the reference point at the top of the ground glass comes into focus and starts getting blurry again. (And remember, top of the ground glass is the bottom of the scene, right?). When both points are equally out-of-focus, lock down the tilt, refocus on your initial point,and then check the other with the loupe. If your lucky (or practiced), both points will be in sharp focus. If not, you need to tilt a tiny (really tiny) bit more. If you didn't go past focus on the reference point at the top of the ground glass, tilt that tiny bit in the same direction. (If that ends up making things worse, you did overshoot the focus when you tilted - start over). Repeat till both points are sharp enough.
And remember, the point of applying tilt is to be able to use a larger aperture to get the desired DoF. It doesn't have to be perfect. If you can make the shot in the f/22 - f/32 range, then it's way good enough. Just remember to check all the possible candidates for focus points when determining the focus spread.
Better now?
Doremus