The ONE Setting RUINING Your Photos (Fix It NOW!)
often a commonly overlooked camera setting. In this video, he reveals the one setting that could be affecting image sharpness and explains how to fix it instantly. He walks viewers through identifying the issue, adjusting camera settings for optimal sharpness, and shares a professional tip to ensure consistently sharp photos, eliminating the problem for good,
2 comments:
Almost 11 minutes to tell to switch on one setting.
Confused, rambling and blaming the wrong camera function.
The example image confirms the thrust of the video i.e. everything is blurred. However, reference to out of focus is wrong. The image is blurred due to camera shake because the SS was too slow. The correct focus mode and focus area mode might have been used but they will be trumped by allowing camera shake to occur. Camera shake has nothing to do with the focusing ability of the camera or photographer.
The 1X focal length rule was never a good rule because it's impossible to apply that rule to every photographer. Some people can get amazingly sharp photos at 1/10 whilst some might need to be at 1/100 at least. The better advice is for everyone to experiment with all their lenses to see what the slowest shutter speed that can be used without creating camera shake. Then there would be no need for a rule so rigid that it can't be useful to any great number of people.
F11 is mentioned a number of times but it's perfectly possible to take a landscape photo that's sharp from front to back using F2.8. Rarely would there be any exposure or shutter speed issues because so much more of the available light can be captured. So much easier, so much more effective.
People need to be given the most amount of useful, flexible information that has a wide application rather than a rigid and alleged one size fits all proposition.
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