Achieving Sharp Focus: The Complete Guide to Tack-Sharp Photos Every Time
You take the shot. You get home. It's blurry. Here's exactly why that happens and how to fix it permanently.
You take a photo. You think it's in focus. You get home and look at it on your computer. It's blurry. Not camera shake blurry. Not motion blur blurry. Just... out of focus. You think: "My camera's autofocus is broken." Spoiler: it's probably not broken. You just need to understand how focus works.
Sharp focus means the part of your photo you want to be sharp is actually sharp crisp, clear, with visible fine detail. Every photo has a part that's in focus and a part that's out of focus. Your job is to make sure the part you want sharp is actually sharp.
The good news: once you understand how focus works, getting sharp photos becomes predictable. This guide covers everything from autofocus modes to manual focus, from portraits to sports, from common problems to advanced tips.
Written by the Carlos.gi team Gibraltar's photography retailer. This guide is designed for beginners and intermediate photographers who want to stop guessing and start getting sharp photos consistently. No jargon. No fluff. Just what works.
Your camera has a lens. The lens focuses light onto the sensor. If the lens is focused at the right distance, the light converges perfectly on the sensor your photo is sharp. If the lens is focused at the wrong distance, the light doesn't converge properly your photo is blurry. That's it. That's focus.
Point, press halfway, camera focuses automatically. Use this most of the time it's fast, reliable, and works in most situations.
Turn the focus ring until sharp. Use when autofocus is struggling low light, close-ups, video, or when you need full precision.
Most cameras have multiple autofocus modes. Choosing the wrong one is one of the most common causes of missed shots. Here are the three you need to know.
Focuses once when you press the shutter button halfway. Locks focus. Doesn't refocus if your subject moves. Perfect for anything that isn't moving.
- Portraits of still subjects
- Landscape photography
- Product photography
- Subject is moving
- Sports or wildlife
- Action sequences
Focuses continuously as you hold the shutter button halfway. Tracks your subject if it moves. Keeps refocusing. Essential for anything that moves running dogs, sports, children, birds in flight.
- Sports photography
- Wildlife in motion
- Video recording
- Subject is completely still
- You need locked focus
- Precise composition control
Detects whether your subject is moving and switches between AF-S and AF-C automatically. Good for general-purpose shooting when you're not sure which mode to use. Not as reliable as choosing the right mode yourself.
Your camera has multiple autofocus points areas where it can detect and lock focus. Choosing the right AF area mode gives you control over where the camera looks.
You select one focus point. Camera focuses only on that point. Use this most of the time it gives you full control over exactly what's sharp.
You select a zone. Camera focuses on anything in that zone. Good for moving subjects gives flexibility while keeping some control.
Camera uses all focus points and focuses on what it thinks is most important. Use when you're unsure but Single Point is usually better.
"Learn this one technique and you'll get sharp photos 90% of the time."
This is the single most important focus technique. It solves the problem of wanting to focus on one thing (like someone's eyes) while framing them off-centre in the composition.
Point your camera directly at the part you want in focus for a portrait, aim the centre of the frame at their eyes.
Press the shutter button halfway. The camera focuses on that spot. Wait for the confirmation beep or light indicator.
While keeping the shutter button pressed halfway (focus stays locked), move your camera to frame the shot how you want it.
Press the shutter button all the way down. The photo is taken with your subject in sharp focus, framed exactly how you want.
You're photographing a person's face and want their eyes sharp, framed nicely to one side of the frame.
- Point your camera at their eyes (centre of frame)
- Press shutter halfway camera focuses on eyes
- Move camera to frame them nicely (rule of thirds)
- Press shutter all the way photo taken
- Result: eyes are sharp, composition is great
Use Single Point AF and point it directly at the subject's eyes. Use Focus and Recompose to frame them nicely. Eyes are the most important part of any portrait if the eyes are sharp, the photo works.
Use a smaller aperture (f/8 or smaller) and focus on a point about one-third into the scene. This is called the hyperfocal distance it maximises the depth of field so everything from the foreground to the horizon appears sharp.
Switch to Continuous AF (AF-C) and use Zone AF or Wide AF. Hold the shutter button halfway and let the camera track your subject as it moves. Use burst/continuous shooting mode to take multiple frames this dramatically increases your hit rate.
Switch to manual focus autofocus hunts and struggles at close range. Focus carefully on the most important detail. Use a smaller aperture for more depth of field. Take multiple shots; at macro distances, even breathing can shift focus enough to miss the shot.
Camera focuses on the background or wrong person instead of your subject.
Switch to Single Point AF. Move the focus point directly onto your subject. Use Focus and Recompose.
Camera hunts back and forth, can't lock focus indoors or at dusk.
Switch to manual focus. Or focus on a high-contrast edge (a light switch, bright area). Use the AF assist beam if your camera has one.
Camera focuses back and forth continuously, never settling on a point.
Use Single Point AF on a specific high-contrast area. If it still hunts, switch to manual focus you'll get the shot faster.
Photos look slightly blurry but you're sure focus was correct.
Check your shutter speed first this is often camera shake, not focus. Increase shutter speed to at least 1/focal length (e.g. 1/50s for a 50mm lens).
You only need to focus on one part usually the closest part. For portraits, focus on the eyes. For landscapes, focus 1/3 into the scene.
Manual focus is better in low light, close-up work, and video. Use the right tool for the situation not just the default.
Blur can be camera shake, motion blur, or depth of field. Check shutter speed first. If it's fast enough, then investigate focus.
You can focus anywhere using Single Point AF. Move the focus point to your subject, or use Focus and Recompose for off-centre subjects.
Ready to practice? These three cameras all in stock at Carlos.gi have excellent autofocus systems that make learning the techniques in this guide straightforward. All include a kit lens so you can start shooting immediately.
Canon EOS R100
RF-S 18-45mm Lens Kit Excellent Autofocus for Learning

The Canon EOS R100 is the ideal camera for learning autofocus. Canon's Dual Pixel CMOS AF is one of the most reliable systems available it locks focus quickly, tracks subjects smoothly, and rarely hunts. The 143-zone AF coverage means you can use Single Point AF anywhere in the frame.
The included 18-45mm kit lens is sharp and versatile wide enough for landscapes, long enough for portraits. It's the perfect learning tool for practising every technique in this guide.
Nikon Z30
16-50mm Vlogging Kit Fast, Reliable Autofocus

The Nikon Z30 is built for creators who shoot both video and photos. Its hybrid phase/contrast detection AF is fast and reliable, with subject tracking that automatically locks onto faces, eyes, and even animals. Perfect for practising continuous AF with moving subjects.
The 16-50mm kit lens is compact and sharp. The Z30 has no viewfinder (screen-only), which actually makes it easier to learn focus techniques you can see exactly where the camera is focusing on the large, clear screen.
Sony ZV-1F
Vlog Camera Best Autofocus for Video and Photos

Sony's Real-time Eye AF is the best face and eye tracking system available at this price point. The ZV-1F locks onto eyes instantly and holds focus even as subjects move making it the ideal camera for practising portrait focus techniques and continuous AF tracking.
The compact 1-inch sensor delivers excellent image quality, and the fixed 20mm lens (equivalent) is perfect for vlogging and everyday photography. If autofocus for video is your priority, this is the one to get.
"Sharp focus is one of the most important technical skills in photography. It's also one of the easiest to learn."
Master these four fundamentals and you will get sharp photos consistently: understand your autofocus modes, use Single Point AF by default, practise Focus and Recompose until it's automatic, and always check focus before pressing the shutter.
The rest back-button focus, focus peaking, hyperfocal distance comes with time. Start with the basics. Get them right. Then build from there.
Get a Camera with Great Autofocus
All cameras in this guide are in stock at Carlos.gi in Gibraltar. Free local delivery. Expert advice from our team.
Practising these techniques? Share your results.
Tag @CarlosGi or use #CarlosGibraltar we may feature your sharp shots in our next guide.