I have done some forum searches and did find a fairly good discussion about focusing the view camera. But, the "focusing" scenario I am having touble with is not answered.
Scenario:
I have my camera set up in the back yard and have set up a "receeding foreground" situation for which I have not been able to achieve focus. I have simply snaked the garden hose away from the camera in a receeding fashion along the ground. The most favorable composition is with the camera pointed downward (there are no verticle/horizontal planes for convergence to be a concern, these scenarios are the simplest, I have found).
Questions:
1. Is this subject situation referred to as being "planar"?
2. Clarify the Scheimpflug Rule please. I have tried to use it to achieve focus, but I must be doing something wrong. The rule seems simple to apply in this situation.
3. Am I supposed to be able to achieve focus in this scenario wide open or must I focus at shooting aperture? (some text examples I have say that this can be accomplished at wide apertures, but I feel it is mostly for wide angle lenses, perhaps not the moderate telephoto quality of the 210). Does anyone ever focus at shooting aperture?
- near point on the ground at the top of the ground glass is 9 ft. from the film plane
- far point on the ground at bottome of the ground glass is 34 ft. from the film plane.
I want sharpness from the top to bottom of the ground glass; shouldn't that be possible?. It seems fairly straight forward but I'm not achieving it. Perhaps I am achieving it and can't tell because, at the moment, I have no loup to rest on the ground glass, just a simple lens I am holding from my eye while trying to examine the ground glass. To add to the difficlulty, I am using a dark colored towel for a focusing hood because my "Black Jacket" 4x5 hood is not here yet.
4. Is this right? With all movements in the "zero" position", I brought the very bottom edge of the ground glass in focus and then tilted the camera back toward me to try and bring the top of the ground glass in focus. Since the camera is already tilted downward, effectively creating front lens tilt, I have tried to get focus by returing the camera back to verticle (and I also tried some additional front lens manipulation, but no good). It certainly will not come into focus at full aperture, but it does look better stopping down to f/32 but too dark to tell clearly.
Thanks for any help. I tried to think these questions out clearly, so I hope they make sense? I've really learned alot on my own in the short time that I have had the camera.
Chuck
Scenario:
I have my camera set up in the back yard and have set up a "receeding foreground" situation for which I have not been able to achieve focus. I have simply snaked the garden hose away from the camera in a receeding fashion along the ground. The most favorable composition is with the camera pointed downward (there are no verticle/horizontal planes for convergence to be a concern, these scenarios are the simplest, I have found).
Questions:
1. Is this subject situation referred to as being "planar"?
2. Clarify the Scheimpflug Rule please. I have tried to use it to achieve focus, but I must be doing something wrong. The rule seems simple to apply in this situation.
3. Am I supposed to be able to achieve focus in this scenario wide open or must I focus at shooting aperture? (some text examples I have say that this can be accomplished at wide apertures, but I feel it is mostly for wide angle lenses, perhaps not the moderate telephoto quality of the 210). Does anyone ever focus at shooting aperture?
- near point on the ground at the top of the ground glass is 9 ft. from the film plane
- far point on the ground at bottome of the ground glass is 34 ft. from the film plane.
I want sharpness from the top to bottom of the ground glass; shouldn't that be possible?. It seems fairly straight forward but I'm not achieving it. Perhaps I am achieving it and can't tell because, at the moment, I have no loup to rest on the ground glass, just a simple lens I am holding from my eye while trying to examine the ground glass. To add to the difficlulty, I am using a dark colored towel for a focusing hood because my "Black Jacket" 4x5 hood is not here yet.
4. Is this right? With all movements in the "zero" position", I brought the very bottom edge of the ground glass in focus and then tilted the camera back toward me to try and bring the top of the ground glass in focus. Since the camera is already tilted downward, effectively creating front lens tilt, I have tried to get focus by returing the camera back to verticle (and I also tried some additional front lens manipulation, but no good). It certainly will not come into focus at full aperture, but it does look better stopping down to f/32 but too dark to tell clearly.
Thanks for any help. I tried to think these questions out clearly, so I hope they make sense? I've really learned alot on my own in the short time that I have had the camera.
Chuck