Thanks Mike.
I don't disagree.
There were four things that kept me from appreciating the DOF at the time I took the shot.
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I was almost standing on my head to frame the image. I wasn't paying close attention to the composition, and couldn't. I knew I had the thing generally in the frame and depended on the camera to bail me out.
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It's a 45mm lens on a medium format camera. I should have had pretty good DOF but it's actually a macro shot so the DOF is limited for that reason.
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The shot is at f/8. I sort of unconsciously set at f/5.6-8 when I try to maximize the technical aspects (resolution) of the shot (which I do too frequently). But I sort of unconsciously find myself getting uncomfortable getting too close to f/11 (and, horrors), f/16 because dreaded diffraction will creep in. I need to stop doing that when I need DOF. But in my defense, stopping down at the close focusing distance would not have increased DOF much. (Dammit, I paid a lot for this lens' resolution, I ain't about to limit it!)
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Over the last year and a half I've had a problem with my right eye. My dominant eye. It's improving and my Ophthalmologist keeps reassuring me it will return to normal. I have better days and not better days. I've tried focusing and composing with my left eye. That's not really working. I rely on the camera to bail me out a lot - point it generally where I know it should be aimed and depend on its auto focus. But I miss things. Like in this shot. Maybe I'll discuss the eye problem more in a later post. Sort of a PSA. What happened to me can happen to anyone.
Rich