Focus

The other day my camera was in its “AF Hunt” mode, where it couldn’t seem to lock on focus. It’d focus past where it should be, and then turn around and focus back the other way, and just keep going. When you use the flash, it’s worse, because it’ll do a strobe flash to try to aid in focus, but it doesn’t help at all.

After a couple times of doing this, I finally got it focused, and just slid the switch on the lens from “AF” to “M,” disengaging automatic focus. It’d hold the focus that way, so it wouldn’t have to focus every time. (I was stationary, photographing something stationary, so there was no need to refocus every time.)

And then I put the camera down and bumped the lens, so the focus was off. So I just turned the focusing ring. And for the rest of the night, I left the camera in manual focus mode. I’ve found that I can do it just as quickly as the camera can focus the lens, and that’s when it works right: I don’t spin the focus back and forth ten times in a vain attempt to focus something.

Leaving it in manual focus also speeds up the shot: you press the shutter and it takes the picture instantly. There’s no waiting as it focuses.

So almost accidentally, I’ve become a fan of manual focus. Sometimes I’m lazy and want the camera to do it for me, but more often than not, I’m finding that I’d just as soon do it myself.

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