Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
The other day it just dawned on me that determaning where the camera should be focused at in order to achieve hyperfocal distance is not so easy as with manual focus 35mm gear, which has distance markings on the lens. Since such markings are not present on a 4x5 lens or the camera, how do you know where to focus in order to achieve thehyperfocal distance?
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
You can make yourself a distance scale. My speed graphic has a distance scale on the bed.
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
Many of the lens specification pages have the Hyperfocal distance/f-stop information on them.
It is then a simple matter of focusing (carefully) on something at this distance and recording the bellows' extension on the rail.
How you do this marking is up to you, but keep in mind that it needs to be repeatable. So, if you have rear extension, you need to zero this somehow so that it is repeatable in the field.
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
Be sure to read this article and the Hansma article within.
http://www.largeformatphotography.info/fstop.html
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
I know of a visually impaired LF photographer in England who shoots architectural interiors using hyper-focal techniques. He has calculated the extension for the lens at a typical distance and f/stop.He sets up the camera with pre-cut sticks between the front and rear standard.
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
The more time one spends in the field, the sharper one’s awareness of “field conditions” and their complications.
For example, let’s say you’ve finalized movements, focus, and aperture for “official” hyperfocal distance. The variable wind, the changing light, your filters, the reciprocity of your film – well, I could go on, but let’s just say your real choices at shutter snap, especially the one about aperture, will often be different than fancier choices from charts & blackboards.
The field is where compromise is king. ;)
Before the lab technicians object, I’ll add that mental exercises do have their use as a “starting point,” making the complications of practical work easier to understand, anticipate, and address. And besides, they provide splendid help for visually impaired photographers, like the clever one Drew mentions above.
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
keep in mind that on a hot day the glass and lens barrel expand with heat and your DOF scale can be off due to heat expansion!
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
Pencil hacks on a pc of masking tape are what most people do. You can use your loupe and actually check what is focus at a given aperture, then shoot a test sheet and loupe it to be certain.
Back in the day, the practical use of Polaroid Type 55 was that you could shoot it and loupe the negative to see if your DOF and sharpness were holding up.
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
Quote:
keep in mind that on a hot day the glass and lens barrel expand with heat and your DOF scale can be off due to heat expansion!
LOL thanks for the practical advise.
Re: Shooting at hyperfocal distance on a 4x5? How?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ki6mf
keep in mind that on a hot day the glass and lens barrel expand with heat and your DOF scale can be off due to heat expansion!
This is confounded by the change in atmospheric density which changes the refractive index - mirages anyone?
Seriously, calibrate your focal length scale at three temps (hot, medium and cold) and you should be fine.
Some photographers freeze their cameras as well as the film to avoid this.