Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/09/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Steve LeHuray was giving some advise: >> << Try walking around your >> house or neighborhood with no film in the camera pretending you are a FBI >> agent and imagine scenes poping into view then, quick focus and shoot. I >> have done this for many hours and still occasionally do it<<<<<<<<<<< Then Ted Grant chimed in with: > > Howdy Gang, > There is one fast way to learn how to focus quickly and it never fails, > unless you're not physically coordinated with your hands and fingers. > > Use the longest lens you own, stand at the side of the highway and focus > on the front of cars coming at you and shoot so that when the film is > developed you can read the license plate sharply! > > Now you understand the reason to be physically astute with your focusing > hand and tripper finger! When you can shoot 3 or 4 rolls of 36 exposure > and have 90% of them sharp, then you can blow away all the street > shooting you want, as you'll be so fast people will only say, "Who was > that masked photographer?" :-) > ted > Victoria, Canada > http://www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant Ted, Good advise. Actually I learned fast focusing on a variation of your theme of standing by a highway and focusing on the license plates of passing cars. Thirty years ago I was hired by a motorcycle magazine as a writer and as they sent me off on my first writing assignment to cover a big national race the editor said, "by the way, while you are there, take a few pictures," as he stuck a SLR with a 200mm lens in my hand. So that is when I started to learn quick focusing, taking pictures of racing motorcycles. I did okay, in four years over 400 published magazine photos with several cover shots. Steve (soon to be one of Ted's students on Cape Cod) LeHuray Annapolis