I know this is bordering on basic, but it seems to be something I'm having a problem with. When I am only photographing one person, I tend to use a lower f/stop around f/2.2 or f/3.2 because I like to blow the background out of focus. On the last couple of shoots I've done, I've only been able to walk away with a few keepers, and even then one of the two people in the image aren't quite sharp enough. For the shoot I was going up to f/5.6, but it seems that in most cases it wasn't quite enough, so a couple of images were closer to f/8.0. The problem then becomes that I seem to almost never be in enough light to get proper exposure, without dropping down to too slow a shutter speed, which then causes me to have camera shake. I honestly don't use a tripod (Even though I have one) for portraits, because it feels so restricting and that I can't move around quick enough to easily get a more interesting angle. Maybe I just need to bite the bullet and use the tripod to help me get more keepers. But then you hear about the people who use ridiculously low shutter speeds and they're still getting tac sharp images, which I know just comes from a lot of practice...and how will I ever get better and be able to do that if I'm always tied to a tripod. Dilemma!![]()
As far as what lens I use, I tend to like my results with my 85mm better than my 40mm. For whatever reason it seems to get sharper images and just be an overall better piece of glass. Problem being of course that I need a faster shutter to hand hold an 85mm than a 40mm, and I seem to lack the light most of the time to do that.
Just in case you ask, my gear is below.
Nikon D7000
Nikkor 85mm 1.8G
Nikkor 40mm f/2.8G AF-S DX Micro
SB 700