…said nobody, ever. Except me.
Hi, I’m a new to this forum, and hoping members might be able to shed light on a considerable bug-bare I have with my camera kit. Sorry this post is long, but I want to give you as much detail as possible. I shoot with a Sony a7s ii and an a6400, and mostly Sony G-series glass. Initially I bought the a7s ii for film, and that’s largely what I still use it for. As my interest in still photography and motion timelapses grew, I found the a7s ii a bit limiting for stills so I added the a6400 to my kit.
My problem is that I’ve always had trouble getting anything (other than landscapes) into sharp focus. For a long time, I assumed it was just a learning curve that I’d eventually master. But after several years of never-quite-sharp photos, I started to suspect it’s more to do with the kit than the operator. Today I tried a few tests with a focus chart, and it did confirm that on both cameras the area of acceptable focus is horrendously narrow. With some lens and aperture combinations, it’s actually impossible to achieve sharp focus. Do other Sony users experience this?
Some specifics:
When shooting landscapes and timelapses I typically use the wide end of the Sony 24-105 F4 G-series or the Zeiss 18mm F2.8 prime, and have no issues with focusing, even at maximum aperture. This seems obvious, given DOF is at its greatest at short focal distances.
Using the Sony 24-105 at its long end gives hit-or-miss results, but closing the aperture beyond F10 and cranking the shutter up to 1/400th or faster improves the chances of a sharp photo, when operating hand held. (But this then requires high ISO, and defeats the purpose of a lens that’s capable of F4 all the way through to 105mm. Like, alarm bells should be ringing at this point).
The problems really become clear when using tele lenses. I can get away with hand-held shots at F10 or above, and a shutter of 1/400th or faster, when at the long end of the Sony 70-200 F2.8 G-series, but oddly, the ability to resolve a sharp image is better with the a7s ii than the a6400. With this lens, the depth of field is shallower on the camera with the smaller sensor, which seems counter-intuitive. I thought the larger the sensor, the shallower the DOF.
The issue is amplified when I put the Sony x2 teleconverter onto the 70-200. Achieving focus whilst handheld is extremely difficult, if not impossible. This is tripod territory. The a7s ii handles the doubler much better than the a6400, but still has a devilishly narrow DOF. On the a7s ii, at wide apertures, focus can JUST be achieved if the camera is rock-solid stationary on a tripod. Closing down the aperture to F16 means that, for example, both of the subject’s eyes might be in focus (if I’m shooting from a tripod and the subject is still). When shooting birds, I typically have to shoot at F22 to have any chance of getting a sharp image. This really doesn’t sound right.
And when this lens & doubler combination is put on the a6400, achieving focus is almost impossible. With a tripod and 2-second shutter delay, I could JUST achieve sharp focus at F22. At F4.5, the DOF was so thin it seemed to be non-existent. I simply couldn’t get a single point of the chart into focus. Perhaps the optics of the 70-200 (and doubler) just aren’t compatible with a6400.
Filming small birds with long-lens stills glass on a locked-off tripod is pushing the limits of the gear, I know, and I long assumed the shallow DOF was just one of those limitations. But that I can’t get sharp STILL IMAGES with stills glass really has me scratching my head. To the point where I’m wishing I hadn’t invested so much into E-mount lenses, and had gone down the micro 4/3 track instead. Is that what it takes to get sharp images?