ViewFinder Photography Forum

General discussion - our photography living room. Talk about aesthetics, philosophy, share your photos - get inspired by your peers! Moderated by another view and walterick.
ViewFinder Forum Guidelines >>
Introduce Yourself! >>
PhotographREVIEW.com Gatherings and Photo Field Trips >>
Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. #1
    n8
    n8 is offline
    Senior Member n8's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Rockford, Il
    Posts
    1,604

    Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    I've been hearing about this quite a bit lately. I understand how to set it up on my camera, and understand how to push the button for AF of course, but I don't quite understand the benefit for the mechanics behind it. Anyone?
    mostly Nikon gear

    Feel free to edit my images for critique, just let me know what you did.

  2. #2
    Senior Shooter Greg McCary's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Rome Ga.
    Posts
    10,550

    Re: Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    I use to setup up my E3 to do this it makes it easier to focus on a specific spot and recompose after focus and the take the shot. Otherwise if I lifted my finger off of the shutter I had to start all over.
    I am like Barney Fife, I have a gun but Andy makes me keep the bullet in my pocket..

    Sony a99/a7R

  3. #3
    Senior Member armando_m's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    Guadalajara Mexico
    Posts
    4,486

    Re: Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    What Greg said
    and there is also the af/ae lock , focus on a spot , exposure from a second one, recompose, shoot

  4. #4
    n8
    n8 is offline
    Senior Member n8's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Rockford, Il
    Posts
    1,604

    Re: Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    Thanks guys. I think it just took a little bit of practicing with it last night to get the hang of it.
    mostly Nikon gear

    Feel free to edit my images for critique, just let me know what you did.

  5. #5
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    New Zealand
    Posts
    13

    Re: Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    Back button focusing is great for trap focus (this can only be done with nikons)

    This is a neat way to use auto focus especially for fast sports/wildlife action.

    Custom (pencil) menu:

    Autofocus set to AF-S
    AF area mode set to single
    AE-L/AF-L set to AF ON

    Compose your shot and set the focus by aiming the centre focus icon at a definite target at the precise distance you want, (Say a tree branch where a bird is about to land, or on second base where the baseball player's foot will land) and pressing the "AE-L/AF-L" button near the viewfinder. This will focus the lens, let go of AE-L/AF-L button. Turn away,
    press and hold the shutter button all the way down. Point camera at pre-focused point when subject approaches, and your camera will take the shot (or shots, if you are in continuous shooting mode.)

    Much faster than Human reflexes.

  6. #6
    Senior Member armando_m's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Location
    Guadalajara Mexico
    Posts
    4,486

    Re: Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    Quote Originally Posted by nekonelac View Post

    Much faster than Human reflexes.
    or any AF system

    why do you say is only doable with nikons?
    I can prefocus my point & shoot and do the same thing, or .... what am I missing ?

  7. #7
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2012
    Location
    New Zealand
    Posts
    13

    Re: Backbutton focusing: how and why?

    Quote Originally Posted by armando_m View Post
    or any AF system

    why do you say is only doable with nikons?
    I can prefocus my point & shoot and do the same thing, or .... what am I missing ?
    You are missing quite a lot- with trap focusing, once you press the back button, focus is locked-and by holding down the shutter button,and pointing camera at the pre-focused area, the shutter will automatically take the shot,when the subject appears

    Her's what dp review forum says about trap focusing
    :Trap focus is a camera feature that allows you to manually focus and have the camera delay firing the shutter until you have pressed AND something is in focus. Originally intended to capture photos of the wedding party as they walk down the aisle, it works for many sports if you pre-focus where the action is headed. With a manual-focus lens, you can also use it to confirm focus by holding down the shutter button while you focus -- it will take the image as soon as focus is achieved.

    And again from Ken Rockwell;
    you can get most AF Nikon cameras to wait and release the shutter only when an object has moved into a preset focus distance if you set the AE-L/AF-L button to AF ON (set in a custom function) and then keep the shutter pressed all the way down while NOT pressing the AE-L/AF-L button. This is called Trap Focus. How does this trick work? Presuming you have the camera set to AF-S mode the camera won't shoot until it thinks the subject is in focus. By setting the AE-L/AF-L button to AF-ON the camera won't focus itself unless you press that button. If you don't press the AF button the camera has to wait for the subject to move and when the "in focus" dot lights up the camera will shoot so long as you've been holding the shutter button all the way down. This trick works so long as you have the camera and lens set to AF-S mode and keep holding the shutter all the way down. If you set the camera to manual focus or touch the focus ring on an AF-s lens while holding down the shutter it will shoot at the wrong time. It's a primitive hack and I doubt it's smart enough to predict subject motion for good results photographing something like horses jumping over a fixed object, but worth a try. It also doesn't work if the subject is moving so fast that the camera doesn't notice it's in focus as the object flies by. Of course you need to prefocus the lens where you want it while not holding the shutter down.
    Last edited by nekonelac; 09-29-2012 at 04:30 AM.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •