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Mirrorless Z
Z6/Z6ii
Focus shifting (landscape)
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<blockquote data-quote="blackstar" data-source="post: 804931" data-attributes="member: 47518"><p>The special thing about my project is the main subject in the landscape scene is very very far (miles) away and some other object (e.g., clouds) is even beyond it. I need a 600mm lens to catch the scene. This is very different from Macro/close-up, even normal landscape scenes (DoF is not that long).</p><p></p><p>Where do you set focus step? Are you talking about the second setting: "Focus step width"? If so, it is not the "focus step" you thought, but the number camera takes to calculate the "step width"... Actually, it determines the "overlap area of focus" between the succeeding two shots: smaller number (smaller step) = bigger overlap (more shots required); larger number (bigger step) = smaller overlap (fewer shots required). (this is my theory, maybe wrong)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="blackstar, post: 804931, member: 47518"] The special thing about my project is the main subject in the landscape scene is very very far (miles) away and some other object (e.g., clouds) is even beyond it. I need a 600mm lens to catch the scene. This is very different from Macro/close-up, even normal landscape scenes (DoF is not that long). Where do you set focus step? Are you talking about the second setting: "Focus step width"? If so, it is not the "focus step" you thought, but the number camera takes to calculate the "step width"... Actually, it determines the "overlap area of focus" between the succeeding two shots: smaller number (smaller step) = bigger overlap (more shots required); larger number (bigger step) = smaller overlap (fewer shots required). (this is my theory, maybe wrong) [/QUOTE]
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Mirrorless Z
Z6/Z6ii
Focus shifting (landscape)
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