Ces1um
Member
Just bought a digital camera- an Olympus om-d em5 mii. I come from a film background so digital stuff is a little new/different to me. I was out the other night and shot some photos of some ducks on the water. There was a little bit of a breeze but the ducks were pretty much just going with the flow. Shot at iso 200, f11, 1/160, single point autofocus, face detection off, ibis on in all four axes. 8/10 of these photos failed to be in sharp focus. I did get 2 usable (and quite sharp) shots though. Now I'm thinking, why did those first 8 shots miss focus? 1/160th of a shutter speed should have frozen the action. It would have on my film camera. F11 means I should have had quite a bit of depth of field. I wrote Olympus tech support including the raw photos (good and bad) and they responded with "subject moved, select a higher shutter speed". In my mind, 1/160th of a second is pretty good to freeze action. It's not like the ducks were taking off. They were just kinda floating on the water. I know digital is different when it comes to focusing and all that. Do I really need a faster shutter speed when using digital when compared to my old film cameras? To me that doesn't make any logical sense.
Can anyone else think of reasons why my focus is missing? I do half press the shutter, and I do get the green "lock on" targeting reticle on my subject. My firmware for both camera and lenses are updated to their most current versions. It was a pretty bright light situation.
To add insult to injury I also find a lot of my close up photos are missing focus as well, but that could be me swaying a bit too much when trying to get a shot.
Can anyone else think of reasons why my focus is missing? I do half press the shutter, and I do get the green "lock on" targeting reticle on my subject. My firmware for both camera and lenses are updated to their most current versions. It was a pretty bright light situation.
To add insult to injury I also find a lot of my close up photos are missing focus as well, but that could be me swaying a bit too much when trying to get a shot.