Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/09/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Its faster still if you divide the range you want to be sharp into thir= ds and focus on something at the end of the first 1/3. I have found that i= n daylight this works very well without consulting the DOF scale. Raimo photos at http://personal.inet.fi/private/raimo.korhonen my=F6s suomeksi - ---------- > From: Jim Brick <jim@brick.org> > To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us > Subject: [Leica] DOF and focusing > Date: 28. syyskuuta 1998 4:20 >=20 > Just a note about my trip slides. >=20 > I've gotten through a bout 20 rolls. As I said earlier, I used the 35= /1.4 > ASPH most of the time. Some of the stuff could be considered happy sn= aps as > it involved the three ladies. Since I was using my M6 exclusively for= the > last 7/8's of the trip, and since much of the stuff was not happy sna= ps, I > devised a focus method that seems to have worked perfectly. What I se= e on > the slides confirms this. And I'm using a 6x Schneider ASPH lupe. >=20 > My entire past has been using a ground glass and checking DOF visuall= y > while stopping down. This rangefinder stuff was difficult for me. So = I > started using the engraved DOF scales on the lens. I would focus on t= he > nearest object that I wanted to be in focus, and I took a meter readi= ng and > figured out the exposure. I placed the foot/meter mark of the focused > object one f/stop wider than the actual f/stop that I was using. If m= y > exposure was 1/125 at f/8 and the closest object was 8' away, I place= d the > 8' mark opposite the f/5.6 mark on the DOF scale. I then looked to se= e > where infinity and the farther distances fell. If the infinity mark w= as at > say f/5.6 I moved the infinity mark to the f/8 DOF mark thus giving m= e a > little more leeway in the close end. I always favored the close end. After > a few days, this became very very quick. By keeping the close stuff a= t one > stop greater than the actual shooting aperture, crisp sharpness is > guaranteed. This is basically hyperfocal -1 focusing, with a close en= d > bias. It worked because nearly all of my slides are tack sharp from f= ront > to back. In those situations that the DOF would not span the entire > distance, I figured out what was important and placed that within the= DOF > scale -1 zone. I sometimes would go for hours and never actually use = the > rangefinder. >=20 > This is a hellova lot faster than visually checking DOF on a ground g= lass > screen. I'm beginning to like my M6. Now if they could somehow make lenses > that didn't cut off part of the viewfinder image... >=20 > Jim