Depth of field with long lenses and two subjects
Song sparrow, Juvenile white-crowned sparrow, and adult white-crowned sparrows at Munson Pond. Many times when photographing birds, I will find more than one in my viewfinder. A single bird is always relatively easy to shoot - focus on the bird (head if possible) and press the shutter button. But what do you do when there is more than one bird? You basically have three choices. You can focus on the closest bird, focus on the farthest bird, or focus on a point somewhere in between. The best choice will vary a lot depending on the exact situation, but there is, I believe, a good general first choice. The best, general first choice is to focus on the closest individual. The reasons are as follows. the front individual will be larger and therefore have more detail than the individual(s) behind it. depth of field is so limited (I used a 500 mm with a 1.4x TC on an APS-C camera to give me a relative focal length of around 1000 mm) when shooting wide o...