Monday, May 17, 2010

Depth of Field


The aperture setting determines the “thickness of the pipe” through which light flows, thus the volume of light and exposure. But as, if not more importantly it influences depth of field, thus plays a major part in creative focusing decisions.

You can think of depth of field as a grid of distance markers from the front to the back of your photo, sort of like a football field. When you make different aperture settings you are influencing how sharp objects at the ten, twenty, thirty yard lines, etc, will be. You are also influencing how sharp they will be in relation to the point or distance you actually have focus set.

Some settings will make the difference of sharpness between, say, the ten and thirty yard lines quite dramatic, and others will make it less so, and others will eliminate any sharpness difference between those distant points.

How can we control the fact that this image shows sharp foreground trees as well as the massive falls miles away? That’s the kind of control depth of field gives you. With a 24mm lens, exposure at ISO 250 was f/9 at 1/125 second.