nickandre
Member
Anyone have tips for accurately and reliably focusing a Hasselblad with some of these "very shallow depth of field" lenses for portraits? Do people have a shooting workflow they use or methods for using the focusing aid? I have the Acute Matte D focusing screen with the split prism + crackle pattern.
I have been using the focusing aid over the eyelashes and trying to minimize my recomposition (/breathing) that I do after focusing. My understanding is that with shallow enough depth of field you can introduce focus error by rotating the camera (and thus the focal plane) after focusing. I think this means, for example, that if I was going to rotate the camera down (to move a face up) after focusing that I would want to err on the near side when doing my focusing.
The percentage of in-focus shots is increasing but I'm still missing even with quite a bit of attention paid to the focusing step. Wondering if there are any tricks or this is just a "sacrifice a number of rolls of out-of-focus frames to the Hasselblad gods" and practice thing.
I have been using the focusing aid over the eyelashes and trying to minimize my recomposition (/breathing) that I do after focusing. My understanding is that with shallow enough depth of field you can introduce focus error by rotating the camera (and thus the focal plane) after focusing. I think this means, for example, that if I was going to rotate the camera down (to move a face up) after focusing that I would want to err on the near side when doing my focusing.
The percentage of in-focus shots is increasing but I'm still missing even with quite a bit of attention paid to the focusing step. Wondering if there are any tricks or this is just a "sacrifice a number of rolls of out-of-focus frames to the Hasselblad gods" and practice thing.