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Looks back-focussed to me.Thanks for your responses, here is the full sized image.
Was there a pause between when you focussed and when you took the picture - if so then maybe in that time she moved (her head) towards you, or you leaned towards her, or both, or the camera/lens simply mis-focussed.
Looking at the image reminded me of something -
I'm not familiar with your camera, but I'm wondering when you focussed on her eye (did you use a single auto focus point - without (the Nikon version) of automatic focus point expansion?
Reason I ask is that the Canon White Paper written a few years ago for the Canon 1Ds Mark II era cameras states that choosing via custom function to have the camera expand the AF points - this happens when the camera can't get a lock using the user selected single AF point -
"... can sometimes cause critical focus to shift slightly ahead of or behind relatively large 3-dimensional subjects like human beings..."



I think there are several things to consider here (I'm replying here but I'm discussing your full resolution image).
Both images look similar. A person with a lens of same focal length, taken at a similar distance. For the while person to be sharp and yet distinct from the background. You need to choose the aperture carefully. I think f2.5 & f3.2 give inadequate dof. F4 or f5.6 would give better results for this type of image.Thanks again. I understand what you say about DOF and its dependence on distance to the subject but hey, this is a portrait lens. Actually yesterday I took a posed tight headshot with this lens at f2.2 and it looks sharper than either of the images I posted.
Maybe it is because it was taken at 1/800 instead of 1/400 or maybe because the subject was still.
@peterharvey Yes, my first FF.
@Halina123 What do you exactly mean by "this type of image".
The fact that it's a "portrait" lens doesn't have much to do with it. There are two things about "portrait lenses" - one is that they have a focal length that allows a head shot, or head and shoulders, to fill the frame at a convenient shooting distance; the other is that some portrait lenses can be relatively soft.Thanks again. I understand what you say about DOF and its dependence on distance to the subject but hey, this is a portrait lens.
Mainly for the reason that that's what the lens is more suited for. A head shot doesn't have things like an arm sticking out in front of the DOF.Actually yesterday I took a posed tight headshot with this lens at f2.2 and it looks sharper than either of the images I posted.
I doubt it, except for the second-order result of movement - that the subject in the first shot you posted could have moved away from where you actually focused. The soft flowers in the lady's hair have nothing to do with shutter speed.Maybe it is because it was taken at 1/800 instead of 1/400 or maybe because the subject was still.
You say you focused on her eye, but when I view it with the DPR loupe, neither eye seems in focus to me.
I assume that since you are focusing on her eye that you thus have selected/chosen only one single auto-focus to be active - is this correct?... Although I don't quite get what you say about single point AF.
That's exactly what my question is about. OK, will read the article.You say you focused on her eye, but when I view it with the DPR loupe, neither eye seems in focus to me.
Below is a link to an article from Robin Wong's blog where he demonstrates how to get the absolute BEST images possible from a very modest Olympus Kit lens. However, I think the principles he enumerates can probably apply to any camera and any lens. A lot of what he writes about in this article seems pretty universal.
https://robinwong.blogspot.com/2016/05/maximizing-use-of-kit-lens-olympus.html
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Focus is in front of the image. Probably did not realise you were doing it, or the camera/lens need to be calibrated.
P. 121 of the user manualDoes the D750 lock the focus when you hold the shutter button half pressed? I may have kept it helf pressed for a little while and the subject moved forward a little.