Hi!
I’m still discovering and experimenting with my Canon EOS R6m2, which I bought with a “RF 24-240mm F4-6.3 IS USM” lens. I turned on the neat camera feature that allows to manually fine-tune the focus via the lens ring after autofocus did its job, while holding the trigger half-pressed, and then finally pressing it fully to take the picture.
Details
In French this option is called “One-Shot→activé (agrandir)”. That’s the version that also zooms in on the target while you fine-tune the focus – the enlargement-less version seems kinda useless to me as you can barely see what you’re doing. It’s in a menu about focusing with the lens ring.
I tend to (figuratively) shoot myself in the foot by:
- Zooming as much as I can (for pseudo-macro stuff).
- Lowering the f-number as much as the zoom level allows me (6.3, if I’m not mistaken).
- Getting as close as I can to the subject (green vs. red autofocus indicator).
When I’m in this configuration, things get horribly frustrating. I hold my breath and try to steady the camera as much as I can, I carefully fine-tune the focus with the ring, the preview on the screen or visor (tried both) looks perfect, I sloooowly press the trigger in full, and… about 50% of the times, the result has its focus shifted by 1–5 millimeters, one way or another (but perhaps more often behind the subject), which can completely ruin pictures of insects and the like.
- Using full autofocus (even in one-shot mode) with no manual fine-tuning somehow seems to work better (as long as I’m very still), but I’d still like to be able to choose between the two options…
- Being farther from the subject (still max zoom, but standing farther, I mean, instead of looking for the green-vs.-red autofocus-indicator limit) seems to drastically increase my chances of success as well.
I initially thought about shutter shock, but my shutter settings (the default values) seem to be in line with the general recommendations (one mechanical, one electronic). Furthermore, shutter speed does not seem to help much; it is generally significantly above the so-called “safety” values.
My paranoid side made me wonder if this is some sort of malfunction, but that would be strange, especially on a brand new camera and lens. I did a quick test by shooting a ruler (focusing specific numbers written on it) by putting the camera down on a hard surface to make sure it did not move, and the results were OK.
So I guess I’m just moving too much when I hold the camera? But that doesn’t change the fact that the pre-shooting preview looks generally OK to me, even with the enlargement provided by the aforementioned semi-manual focus feature. I know that the simple fact of pressing the last half of the trigger can induce movement, but I’m trying to do that very carefully (and tried with a two-second timer as well, to be able to steady again after the press).
Sure, I could change the f-number to increase the depth of field (I think I read somewhere that using the lowest available value was rarely a good idea, but I’m not sure), etc., but if my focus is off anyway, that would not change the fact that the picture may be suboptimal (possibly without me even noticing it until I inspect it very carefully), and that would therefore still bother me a lot.
- Am I asking for something virtually impossible without full autofocus or a tripod? Should I just bite the bullet and step back a bit more, systematically, instead of aiming at being as at-close-range as possible when zooming to the maximum?
- Are my camera and lens behaving “normally”? (The misleading previews worry me.)
- Am I just terrible at standing still? I thought I was OK at this, with my previous camera.
I haven’t experimented that much with fully manual focus but I think it was more or less the same.
Transitioning from a compact camera to this is not as straightforward as I thought. I’m spending lots of time shooting the same thing multiple times, and then deleting the missed pictures by zooming on each (on the camera screen, the issue is generally not noticeable without zooming in), which kills a large part of the fun.
Thanks in advance to anyone that’ll manage to bring back part of that fun.