• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

PhotoNaturalist - nature photography tips and tutorials

nature photography tips and tutorials

  • Home
  • Articles
  • eBooks
  • About
  • Contact

How To Focus Closer With your Lenses

March 5, 2013 by Steve Berardi 3 Comments

Every lens has a minimum focusing distance: the closest point where the lens can get a sharp focus. Generally, the longer the focal length of the lens, the greater the minimum focusing distance.

Most of the time, this distance isn’t a problem because with longer lenses you’ll generally be photographing a distant subject.

But, those longer telephoto lenses are also great for close-up photography, because they help you isolate your subject against a specific part of the background. In these cases, this minimum focus distance often becomes a problem because many lenses won’t let you get close enough to fill the frame with a small subject (such as a wildflower or insect).

So, how do you make your lens focus closer?

Use an extension tube

An extension tube (pictured above) is a pretty basic piece of equipment: it’s just a hollow tube that extends the distance between the lens and the camera’s sensor. The more you increase this distance, the closer the lens can focus.

Extension tubes come in a variety of different sizes, from 12mm to 50mm, but the one around 25mm is usually the most useful. For example, if you put the 25mm extension tube on a Canon 70-200 F/4L lens, you can change the minimum focusing distance from 4.9 ft to about 4 ft (which can make a big difference in close-up photography).

Although the 25mm tube is probably the one you’ll use the most, there’s also a benefit to owning a set of different tube sizes. One of the great things about extension tubes is that you can stack them together to make your lens focus even closer. Ever since getting a set of these tubes, I often stack a 36mm with a 20mm to make my lenses focus extremely close. This helps me fill the frame with small subjects like these wildflowers:

Purple Nightshade / Photo by Steve Berardi
Purple Nightshade / Photo by Steve Berardi

If you ever use an extension tube with a teleconverter, remember to attach the teleconverter to your camera first (so the extension tube should be between the teleconverter and lens).

Which extension tubes should you get?

As I mentioned earlier, it’s nice to have a set of extension tubes because then you have a lot of freedom in focusing close. When you buy tubes in a set, you also save some money, so I’d recommend getting a set of three if possible. If you just want to try them out for now, and only get one, then get one around 25mm because that’s probably the one you’d use the most.

Most camera manufacturers make their own line of extension tubes, but they’re usually pretty expensive compared to off-brand options. Since extension tubes are just a little bit of plastic and a little bit of metal, I usually buy the off-brand tubes to save money. Personally, I’ve used Kenko tubes for years, and have never had a problem.

When shopping for extension tubes, it’s important to keep in mind that many of the cheaper tubes don’t retain autofocus with your lens, so make sure you read the product description carefully (if autofocus is important to you for macro shots), and read the reviews!

Get more nature photography tips in our free weekly newsletter


steveb2About the Author: Steve Berardi is a naturalist, photographer, software engineer, and founder of PhotoNaturalist. You can usually find him hiking in the beautiful mountains and deserts of southern California.

Share
Share on Facebook
Share
Share this
Pin
Pin this
Share
Share on Google Plus

Filed Under: Macro, Tips, Wildflowers Tagged With: close, close up, distance, focus, insects, lens, lenses, Macro, minimum, photography, up, wildflowers

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Butch says

    August 23, 2017 at 6:08 pm

    Wish I had read this before buying my extension tubes. Question, what do you recommend, lens wise, to use as your go to lens and then make your extension use from there? I have 11-16mm, 18 -135mm, 55 – 250mm and an 18 – 270mm lenses. I think I need conformity in my learning process right now. My tubes are the mount adapter ring, 7mm, 14mm, 28mm and the lens mount ring. This was a set at BH Photo made by Polaroid.

    Reply
    • Steve Berardi says

      August 24, 2017 at 11:53 am

      Hey Butch,

      The usefulness of extension tubes depends on the minimum focus distance of your lenses. In general, shorter focal lengths (less than 50mm) have close focus distances, and longer lenses (more than 50mm) have farther focus distances — so, in general, extension tubes are more useful for longer lenses. I mostly use my extension tubes with a 300mm lens or with the 50mm sometimes (but with the 50mm, I usually just use the 12mm tube). I recommend experimenting, and look at the extension tubes just as a tool: if you’re trying to take a photo of something (say a flower), but your lens won’t focus cause you’re too close, then try putting on an extension tube to help you get that image you want.

      Hope that helps!

      Steve

      Reply
      • Butch says

        August 24, 2017 at 5:12 pm

        Thanks Steve, great help in understanding

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Before Footer

Topics

aperture bird photography birds camera close close up clouds composition depth of field ebook exposure flower focus gear histogram image landscape lens lenses light Macro moon nature nature photography photo photograph photography photonaturalist photos photoshop sharp sharpness subject sun sunrise sunset telephoto Tips tripod vision weather wild wildflower wildflowers Wildlife

Footer

Popular Articles

  • 7 tips for getting sharper photographs
  • How to use the histogram for a good exposure
  • How to resize your photos (the “sharp” way)
  • 13 tips for better wildflower photography
  • How to photograph dragonflies (free eBook!)
  • RAW vs JPEG: Who wins?
  • How to get sharp photos of birds in flight
  • What to photograph on an overcast day
  • What is a natural photograph?
  • Three elements of a great landscape
  • 11 tips for avoiding memory card problems
  • Tips for photographing shorebirds
  • What mode should you shoot in?

Categories

  • Book Reviews
  • Close-Up
  • Gear Reviews
  • Landscapes
  • Macro
  • Philosophy
  • Photoshop Tutorials
  • Tips
  • Uncategorized
  • Wildflowers
  • Wildlife

Copyright © 2025 · Wellness Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in