Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/11/04

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Re: Greg Bicket's focus thread
From: Douglas Herr <telyt560@cswebmail.com>
Date: 4 Nov 2000 09:50:40 -0800

On Sat, 04 November 2000, Jim Brick wrote:

> 
> At 09:48 AM 11/4/00 -0500, gbicket wrote:
> >Morning!
> >
> ><snip>
> >
> >Now as long as we're considering the remote possibility of photographer
> >error, let me jump to confess that after lots of trying with the 80mm R, I
> >could never consistently put the focus plane where I wanted it.  Some rolls
> >would come back with hilariously misplaced planes of focus.  One by one
> >revealing that while there was indeed a razor sharp focus plane, and
> >beaucoup bokeh, often nowhere near I intended it.  I got it right between a
> >third and half the time!  There were even shots that turned out interesting,
> >but fully unintentional in terms of what I had attempted to do.
> >Compliments about the unintended focus plane in a particular photograph made
> >it worse!
> >
> ><snip>
> >
> >Enjoy the light.
> >
> >Greg
> > 
> 
> Greg's post is a great post. Everyone should read it in it's entirety. Not
> just this snip.
> 
> What Greg has outlined is exactly why AUTOFOCUS camera/lenses are useful
> for only a very limited and select set of conditions. Like bright sun, ISO
> 400, f/8-f/22. Weddings, flat walls with graffiti, etc. Autofocus
> algorithms look for vertical or horizontal (whichever your camera maker has
> provided) contrast lines. Since you, the human, who are looking at the
> ground glass screen, know what it is that you want in focus, how can a
> computer program written by a programmer, sitting in a cubicle somewhere,
> know what you want to focus on? They cannot, the camera can't, and even you
> the human, will sometimes have trouble.
> 
> This, to me, is why autofocus is useless to the photographer-artist,
> commercial/illustrative photographer, amateurs who want to control what
> gets put on the film, etc. Autofocus is great for weddings, journalism,
> county fairs, happy snaps, vacations, and all of the times when you can
> live with where, on the subject, the focus program focuses your lens.
> 
> Jim

So, Jim, if I'm understanding you correctly, AF will reduce the influence of pilot error, resulting in uniformly mediocre results :)

Doug Herr
Birdman of Sacramento
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/telyt
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