9 min read

Subject Distance for Video: Staying in Focus While Moving

Still photography forgives a lot β€” if your subject moves slightly between frames, you just keep shooting. Video is merciless. A subject drifting out of focus for even half a second is visible, distracting, and often unusable. Understanding subject distance is the foundation of keeping that from happening.

Why Distance Is the Central Variable in Video Focus

In video, your subject is almost always moving β€” walking toward camera, stepping back, turning. Every change in distance changes the required focus point. The closer your subject is to the camera, the faster that focus point needs to travel to keep up with the same movement speed.

πŸ“ The Distance-Sensitivity Relationship

Focus sensitivity to movement = focal_lengthΒ² / (distance Γ— aperture)

This means:

β†’ A subject 1m away moving at 1m/s requires focus to move 10Γ— faster than at 10m

β†’ Longer focal lengths amplify this sensitivity dramatically

β†’ Wider apertures (shallower DOF) leave less margin for focus lag

Practical takeaway: telephoto + close subject + wide aperture = the hardest possible combination for continuous focus

This relationship is why videographers who understand it make very deliberate choices about working distance β€” it's not just an aesthetic decision, it's a technical one that determines whether continuous AF can even keep up.

The DOF Safety Margin

Depth of field acts as a buffer against small focus tracking errors. If your DOF is 30cm and your subject moves 5cm closer to camera between AF updates, they're still sharp. If your DOF is 3cm, that same 5cm shift puts them outside the focus zone.

Focal LengthApertureDistanceDOFVideo Difficulty
24mmf/2.83m~1.8mEasy βœ…
50mmf/2.83m~45cmManageable βœ…
85mmf/2.83m~16cmChallenging ⚠️
85mmf/1.82m~5cmVery hard ❌
135mmf/23m~6cmVery hard ❌
200mmf/2.85m~10cmHard ⚠️

For continuous AF video, aim for at least 20–30cm of DOF as a safety buffer. Below that, even the best AF systems will produce visible focus hunting or brief soft moments when the subject moves unexpectedly.

Distance Strategies for Different Video Scenarios

Run-and-Gun / Documentary

Handheld documentary shooting β€” interviews in motion, following subjects through environments β€” is one of the most demanding video focus scenarios. Your subject's distance changes constantly and unpredictably.

Recommended Setup

Focal length: 24–35mm

Aperture: f/2.8–f/4 (wider DOF = more forgiveness)

Working distance: 1.5–3m from subject

Why: Wide lenses from moderate distance give 40–80cm of DOF β€” enough that AF lag rarely causes visible softness

What to Avoid

Telephoto from close range: Kills DOF safety margin

f/1.4–f/1.8 for moving subjects: DOF too thin for tracking

Very close working distance: Tiny subject movements require massive focus adjustments

Cinematic Narrative / Controlled Sets

When you control the environment β€” a film set, a structured interview, a planned sequence β€” you can afford shallower DOF because subject movement is predictable or blocked (physically planned).

The key technique here is focus pulling: a dedicated focus puller (or the camera operator themselves) manually adjusts focus to follow the subject's predetermined path. This requires knowing the exact distances at each position.

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip: Mark Your Distances

On controlled sets, use a tape measure to mark the exact focus distance at each key position your subject will occupy β€” sitting, standing, walking toward camera. Many cinema lenses have focus marks in metres/feet on the barrel. Pull between these marks as the actor moves. This is more reliable than continuous AF for wide-aperture cinematic work.

Wildlife and Nature Video

Wildlife video typically uses long telephoto lenses (200–600mm) at distances of 5–50 metres. The challenge: at these focal lengths, even at relatively small apertures, DOF is measured in centimetres at close range. A bird hopping closer by 30cm can drift out of focus instantly.

SubjectTypical DistanceRecommended FLAperture for Usable DOF
Garden birds3–8m300–400mmf/5.6–f/8
Waterfowl5–20m200–400mmf/5.6
Deer / large mammals10–40m200–300mmf/4–f/5.6
Flying birds5–30m variable300–600mmf/5.6–f/8

For wildlife video, continuous AF with subject tracking is non-negotiable β€” manual focus simply can't keep up with unpredictable animal movement. Modern mirrorless cameras with bird/animal detection AF have transformed wildlife video focus.

Interview and Talking Head Video

The subject is stationary or nearly so β€” this is the most forgiving scenario for focus. The main concern is the subject leaning forward or back, which at close range with a portrait-length lens can cause focus drift.

Comfortable Setup (Any Skill Level)

Lens: 35–50mm

Aperture: f/2.8–f/4

Distance: 2–3m

DOF: 30–60cm β€” absorbs leaning movement easily

Cinematic Setup (More Care Needed)

Lens: 85–135mm

Aperture: f/2–f/2.8

Distance: 3–5m

DOF: 8–20cm β€” needs eye AF or careful manual focus

Autofocus for Video: Making It Work

Continuous AF vs Manual Focus

The debate between continuous AF and manual focus for video is largely resolved by two factors: the production type and the AF system quality.

ScenarioRecommended MethodWhy
Solo run-and-gunContinuous AF (face/eye)Can't operate camera and pull focus simultaneously
Controlled narrativeManual pull (or AF-assist)Precise, predictable, no hunting artifacts
WildlifeContinuous AF (subject tracking)Unpredictable movement, too fast for manual
Interview (stationary)Either β€” AF easierLow movement = forgiving for both methods
Action sports videoContinuous AFSpeed of movement exceeds manual capability

AF Speed and Breathing

Two video-specific AF problems are AF hunting (the lens searching back and forth when it loses tracking) and focus breathing (the image changing size slightly as focus adjusts β€” visible on some lenses). To minimise both:

πŸ’‘ Pro Tip: Set AF Sensitivity to Low for Video

Most cameras have a separate AF sensitivity or "AF transition speed" setting for video mode. Set this to slow or medium-slow. A high sensitivity causes the lens to constantly micro-adjust and hunt. A lower sensitivity smooths out tracking and only refocuses when the subject clearly moves β€” which looks far more professional on camera.

Distance Management on Set

Blocking and Distance Control

In controlled video productions, blocking β€” planning exactly where subjects will stand and move β€” is the most powerful tool for focus management. When you know a subject will walk from position A (4m from camera) to position B (2m from camera) and stop, you can pre-programme focus marks or simply tell your AF system exactly what to expect.

Communicate with your subjects about distance. "Stay between this mark and that mark" is a perfectly normal instruction on any video set, and it makes focus management dramatically easier.

The Safety Distance Concept

Define a "focus safe zone" for your shot β€” the range of distances within which your subject can move and remain in acceptable focus. At f/2.8 on a 50mm lens from 3m, this zone is roughly 2.6m to 3.5m β€” a 90cm range. Brief movements within that range won't require a focus update at all.

Communicate this zone to subjects: "Stay within one arm's length of where you're standing now." Most people can manage this intuitively once they understand why it matters.

🎯 Calculate Your Distance

Lens Choice for Video Focus by Distance

Working DistanceBest Lens ChoiceWhy
0.5–1.5m (very close)24–35mm f/2.8Wide angle provides forgiving DOF at close range
1.5–3m (standard)35–50mm f/2.8Natural FOV, workable DOF for continuous AF
3–6m (medium)50–85mm f/2.8Cinematic compression, DOF still manageable
6–15m (long)85–135mm f/2.8–f/4Compression and subject isolation, increased DOF at distance
15m+ (telephoto)200–400mm f/4–f/5.6Longer distance increases DOF even at telephoto FL

Final Thoughts

Video focus is fundamentally a distance problem. The variables that determine whether your continuous AF can keep up β€” focal length, aperture, and working distance β€” all come back to how DOF behaves at a given subject distance. Understanding that relationship lets you make deliberate choices rather than hoping your AF system figures it out.

For most video work, the solution is simpler than it might seem: maintain a consistent working distance, choose a focal length that gives you adequate DOF safety margin for the shot type, and use face/eye/subject tracking AF when shooting alone. Nail those three things, and your subjects stay in focus β€” moving or not.