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Photo Lesson; Depth Of Field
By Mike Stensvold February, 2005
When you focus your camera’s lens on a subject, the point focused upon
is sharp. Objects in the scene closer or farther than that point appear progressively
less sharp as their distance from the focused point increases.
Depth of field refers to the area in front of and beyond the point focused upon
in which things appear acceptably sharp in a photograph. Depth of field is really
an illusion: Again, the point focused upon is sharp; everything in the scene
closer to or farther from the camera is less sharp. Depth of field is based
on the fact that our eyes can’t differentiate between dead-on sharp and
almost-sharp until the lack of sharpness reaches a certain degree. Within depth-of-field
limits, objects in the photo will appear sufficiently sharp at normal viewing
distances for the print size.
Depth of field affects every photograph. So it’s a good idea to put it
to work for you, rather than just leave it to chance. You have three controls
over depth of field: aperture, focal length, and focusing distance. Smaller
apertures increase depth of field, while larger apertures decrease it. Shorter
focal lengths increase depth of field, while longer focal lengths decrease it.
And greater focusing distances increase depth of field, while shorter focusing
distances decrease it.
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Shooting
at the lens’ smaller apertures provides greater depth of
field, handy when you have important subjects in the scene at
different distances from the camera
Photo by Mike Stensvold
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1. Great Depth of Field
Great depth of field is handy when you have several important subjects in a
scene, each at a different distance from the camera. It’s also useful
when you want to get an entire three-dimensional subject sharp, rather than
just a portion of it.
To produce the needed depth of field, the best strategy is to stop the lens
down. You can also increase depth of field by using a shorter lens focal length,
but this will also change the framing of the image. And you can increase depth
of field by moving farther from the subject, but this will also change the framing
and the perspective. So the best way to increase depth of field generally is
to stop the lens down. Note that stopping the lens down will reduce the light
transmitted by the lens, and thus require longer exposure times in a given light
level. If shutter speeds get too slow, it’s a good idea to mount the camera
on a tripod, or use flash. (A good rule of thumb for when to put the camera
on a tripod is when shutter speeds drop below the reciprocal of the focal length
of the lens: For example, with a 200mm lens, use a tripod when shutter speeds
drop below 1¼200.)
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Consumer
digicams rarely stop down beyond f/8, but still provide great
depth of field because of the short true focal lengths of their
lenses, and their tiny aperture diameters. While the lens on the
Pentax Optio 750Z used for this shot is equivalent to 37.5-187.5mm
on a 35mm camera, the actual focal-length range of the lens is
7.8–39mm. Thus, the f/5.6 aperture used to make this shot
at the wide setting is only 1.4mm in diameter (7.8mm/5.6): very
small. (If this lens stopped down to f/16, the aperture diameter
would be just 0.49mm, and diffraction would be a problem.)
Photo by Ron Leach
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2. Selective Focus
While we’re more often concerned with increasing depth of field, limiting
it can also be effective. If you must shoot against a distracting background
(i.e., you can’t move the camera or the subject), you can minimize depth
of field by shooting with the lens wide open, and thus throw the distracting
background so far out of focus that it ceases to be a distraction. Macro photographers
often take advantage of extremely limited depth of field at very close focusing
distance to concentrate the viewer’s attention on a specific portion of
a flower or insect or other small subject, focusing carefully on that area and
letting all else go completely out of focus.
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Top:
Minimizing depth of field by shooting with the lens wide open
can throw a distracting background so far out of focus that it
is no longer distracting. This is especially effective at close
focusing distances, which also reduce depth of field. Photo by
Mike Stensvold
Above:
Don’t arbitrarily shoot all your photos with the lens either
wide open or stopped all the way down. There are times when an
intermediate aperture will produce the effect you want, as in
this photo. Other times, a fast or slow shutter speed will be
more important than a specific amount of depth of field. Consider
what you need to produce the image you want, then set your camera
accordingly.
Photo by Ron Leach
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Depth-of-Field Tips
1. Small apertures provide more depth of field, wide apertures less
2. Shorter focal lengths provide more depth of field, longer focal lengths less
3. Greater shooting distances provide more depth of field, shorter distances
less
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