Or bring back eye control back from the 90's, implement it with cross points focus all round.
Compose, look at your subject and shoot.
I still use that on my EOS 3

Or bring back eye control back from the 90's, implement it with cross points focus all round.
Compose, look at your subject and shoot.
Or bring back eye control back from the 90's, implement it with cross points focus all round.
Compose, look at your subject and shoot.
Or bring back eye control back from the 90's, implement it with cross points focus all round.
Compose, look at your subject and shoot.
Ok, thanks, I understand more what was being said with the links etc.
Thankfully, with my photographic subjects, using the point and recompose method isn't something I've noticed making a mess of my intended focus point, I guess my situations mean it isn't that critical. Having said that, it could have course explain why occassionally I get a shot that isn't in focus, even though I know I focused there!
I shall consider this a bit more next time I'm shooting some portraits.
Actually, I was being sarcastic, I never got mine to work 100% even after calibration. It keep missing it so I got frustrated and turned it off lol
Well, I never usd but heard it work OK. I would think with modern tech it could be made a feasible option.
This is a clasic case of focus and recompose failure, wehn you need mm focusing accuracy.
But if you're doing portraits you're unlikely to be shooting wide open so the undesirable effects of focus & recompose are all but negated.