DEPTH-OF-FIELD AND FOCUS
Dependent on the chosen aperture (f-stop),
the focal length and the focus distance you have a certain depth-of-field
(DOF). The DOF defines a zone around the chosen focus point where objects
appear to be sharp. Beyond the (floating) border of this zone objects get
blurry. Typical beginners tend to think that a good picture is a picture
where everything is sharp so often small aperture values are preferred
in order to maximize the depth-of-field. This assumption works fine some
photographics scenes but it's certainly wrong as a general shooting philosophy.
All pictures provided by Michael Wagner.
The following picture (large aperture)
isolates a small zone around the focus plane.
The next picture (same focus plane) was
shot with minimal aperture to achieve max. depth-of-field.
The next shot (large aperture) isolates
the foreground ...
... whereas this one prefers a different
focus plane (same aperture).
As you can see we have lots of potential
creativity just by selecting the aperture and focus plane.
FOCAL-LENGTH AND PERSPECTIVE
There's a bit more about the focal length
than just the coverage of a certain angle of view - there's always distinct
effect on the relationship between the objects within a scene.
All picture by Michael Wagner.
Let's have a look at a relatively wide
focal lenght first: 28mm. The following image samples show 4 trees with
an equal distance between neighbour trees. At the wide setting it seems
that this distance actually increases dramatically towards the foreground
(exponential behaviour of the distance). It other words: the tree to the
left seems to be totally seperated from the rest of the gang. The background
seems to be far in the distance.
The next picture has a more natural view
at about 50mm. The perspective is obviously much less extreme. Due to our
real life experience we can guess that the distance between the trees is
rougly the same though the seperation is still visible (d^2 behaviour).
Now we have a 100mm lens. The trees seem
to group here with a seemingly small distance between the trees. Compared
to the previous sample the now enlarged background suddenly moved towards
the main object. The scene is compressed now.
At 200mm the effect increases even more.
The group of trees seems to be virtually on the same distance plane. The
background may be blurry (due to the small depth-of-field) but it seems
to be just a few meters away. We speak of a "flat" perspective is this
case.
OBJECT ISOLATION
An object can be seperated from its environment
by various methods. E.g. you can use a very wide lens to sort the scene
into distinctive layers. However, while you seperate the object the environment
is still visible which may be disturbing because -say- the background is
very ugly. Sometimes there's a workaround for this problem: we choose a
very small depth-of-field so only the main subject is in focus while everything
in front or behind the focus plane gets blurry and therefore virtually
unimportant. Have a look at the 1st sample below. The blue marble to right
right sucks the view from the first look. This is a natural reaction because
the brain scans for the most contrasty subject first. The isolation of
the object due to its "outstanding" sharpness is very significant here.
by Michael Wagner
Wanna see a perverse example ... Imagine
to be in the Himalayas at a nice sunset and all you shoot is a beautiful
rose ... The result is not all too bad I think!
A small DOF is also a common technique
for portrait photography. Usually it is quite difficult to find the right
balance between people, that are chosen to be the main subject, and their
environment. A sharp background is often distracting here so a large aperture
should be used to focus the attention on the point of interest.
by Randhir Amoganathan
SEPERATION
A small depth-of-field can seperate a subject
quite easily from the surrounding but sometimes this is no option because
we either operate at very long focus distances or we simply want to include
a sharp focused environment in the scene. Nonetheless we often still have
the option to stress the importance of a certain object.
In the first picture we wouldn't gain anything
by choosing a large aperture because the fore- and background doesn't contain
any disturbing objects. The bath-tubs are the naturally isolated by the
difference in brightness and the interruption of the uniform environment.
A similar scene is e.g. a boat on the wide open sea.
by Horst Schneider
The scene itself may be quite dramatic
and in the first moments your attention may be drawn to the impressive
mountains in the background. However sooner or later your view will get
focused on the fisherman in the middle of the river because the contrast
difference between him and his surrounding is the highest in the otherwise
low contrast environment.
by Horst Schneider
COMPRESSION
A major problem with many presentations
is an owerwhelming usage of wide-angle lenses. Monotonious perspectives
are poison so just add some dynamic here and go for a medium tele lens.
This may be an usual thought but once you got used to the idea that typical
portrait lenses like a 85mm or 135mm are good for more ... much more. In
contrast to the depth provided by a wide-angle lens it'll compress a scene
or isolate or special object.
The first picture illustrates how a tele
lens can compress the several layers of the scene to a relatively flat
perspective with a seemingly small distance between the layers.
The next picture shows that this also works
pretty good for landscape shots as well.
LAYERS
Very often you've a major landscape feature
like a spectecular mountain which will degenerate to just another rock
on a picture. After the first look the viewer has already sucked it all
information of the scene so there's not much left than the raving comments
of the photographer.
Have a look at 1st picture below. The volcano
in the background is still the dominating feature of the landscape but
there's more. We've two additional
layers - the foreground and the
center - both not too impressive but it adds a certain kick to the scene.
It is the quite the same with 2nd picture to the right. None of the objects
is very special and probably not worth a picture. However, the layered
scene as a whole is quite beautiful with the fuzzy mountains at the horizon,
the rocks in the blue sea and the foreground with its fine structures.
The two pictures below show the effect
of a single additional layer. The left picture may show an impressive mountain
but nonetheless it looks a bit empty - the right picture looks more interesting.
© Copyright Klaus Schroiff
Published with permission of the author. Original article can be found here:
http://photozone.de/bindex4.html
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