This is a bit embarrassing for me to ask because it seems to be so fundamental , but if I don't ask I will never learn. Yesterday I went with a group of friends and took my camera to take pictures. When I got home, I found many of the pictures out of focus. Before that, I had been shooting scenes most the time, and even if there were people, I only took portraits of one person at a time, but never complex scenes with many people in the frame.
The cause of the problem was the AF points. I usually set all the AF points to be active, or set the center one. With all 9 points active, the algorithm picks the closest object to focus, and that is usually the table, or the beer keg (definitely an issue with composition here too, but shall we ignore it for now?) . And when it is set to the center one, it is the background in the focus because people are having conversations and each one takes up one side of the frame, just missed by the center focal point.
I can certainly switch the active AF points as needed, but that would take time and I will miss some interesting interactions between people (well, with out of focus pictures, I haven't exactly captured them either
). So I am just wondering if there is a faster way to focus on the part of the frame as needed.
The answer to this question would also help me on portraits as well. All texts say when taking a portrait, I need to set the focus on their eyes. But in the pictures I took, the focus is usually on the nose if it is a close-up, or on the chest if it is a little far-away, and the eye portion of the face rarely fall onto any AF points conveniently. So how do I quickly focus on people's eyes without resolving to manual focus?
Funny that it never was an issue with a point-and-shoot...