An out-of-focus photograph usually means the lens focused at a different distance from the intended subject.
Unlike motion blur, focus error often leaves another plane in the scene sharp. Diagnosing that plane helps identify technique, autofocus or camera alignment issues.
What the evidence can tell you
Look for sharp detail in front of or behind the subject. If nothing is sharp, consider motion, lens haze, film flatness or scanning rather than focus alone.
Common causes
- Manual focusing at the wrong distance
- Autofocus locking onto the background
- Minimum-focus distance exceeded
- Rangefinder misalignment
- Split-prism or focusing-screen error
- Film not held flat at the image gate
- Scanner focus error
What can be done
Use a clear focus target, confirm autofocus lock, respect minimum distance and test the camera at measured distances. Rangefinders and SLR focusing systems may need calibration.
What to do next
- Keep the negatives and inspect them under a clean light source.
- Check whether the pattern affects one frame, several frames or the whole roll.
- Compare another roll from the same camera when possible.
- Send the laboratory the frame numbers and a photograph of the physical strip.
Frequently asked questions
Can rescanning solve the problem?
It helps only if the negative contains sharp detail and the scanner focused incorrectly.
Does this automatically mean the laboratory made a mistake?
No. The pattern on the negative must be compared with camera behaviour, exposure, storage, development and scanning before assigning a cause.
Should I keep using the camera?
If focus consistently falls in front of or behind the subject, have the camera or lens calibrated.
Why should I keep the negative?
The negative is the original evidence. A digital scan alone cannot always reveal where a fault began.
Use the Film Problems & Negative Diagnosis Guide and our film scanning guide to continue the diagnosis.
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