Aperture

Photography courses textbook. Aperture in digital photography.

Aperture

Shutter speed, aperture and ISO are the main three things you will have to feel if you use your DSLR camera in Manual mode. These three things are closely related to each other, we can say that they are three pillars upon which the digital photography is based.

This article is about the second pillar : aperture.

DOF

Video Tutorial

Simulators

You can play with simulators. This is very useful. You can try different lenses.

Here is a great focal length Nikon simulator:
http://imaging.nikon.com/lineup/lens/simulator/

This is more complicated simulator. It takes into account not only focal length but also the distance to the object.
It’s more close to reality.
http://dofsimulator.net/en/

Description

Let’s turn again to Wikipedia: “In optics, an aperture is a hole or an opening through which light travels.”

Here the life is a bit more complicated for a beginner photographer. Again, this is about the “amount” of light, but, in contrast to the shutter speed, aperture controls the thickness of the beam of light, by reducing or increasing the relative aperture. Here is how this aperture hole looks like:
Photography courses and workshops - Aperture examples

Don’t be confused, since the term aperture is used in two meanings:

  • First, this is the device itself in the lens which controls the hole.
  • Second, this is the size of the hole. For instance, if we say “open aperture”, “close aperture”, we are talking about the size of the hole.

There is a scale of standard aperture values:
1.2
1.4
1.8
2.8
3.5
4.5
5.6
6.3
7.1
8.0
9.0
11
13
16
22
32

This scale is based on the increase or decrease of illumination matrix twice.
Like with shutter speed, a beginner might be confused with the fractions: aperture value 5.6 is bigger than aperture value 8.

The main effect of aperture value is similar to the shutter speed – the brightness of the image. The bigger the hole, the brighter image you get.
But the side effect is different, when you change aperture you also change depth of field. Depth of field (DOF) is the distance between the nearest and farthest objects in a scene that appear acceptably sharp in an image.
A good rule of thumb is:
Photography courses and workshops : Aperture and DOF

Let’s look at the three examples I prepared to illustrate these effects.
Photography courses and workshops - How to control DOF using Aperture

Example 1. With open aperture (f1.6) you decrease DOF and get the ability to focus on every violin separately.

Photography courses - Closes aperture increases depth of field

Example 2. If you close the aperture(right image) your DOF is almost infinity. In this case both violins are in focus.

Photography courses and workshops - Aperture, depth of field, and focal length

Example 3. You have to remember that all the above is true only when focal length is big enough. On the right image, when I decreased the focal length, even with the open aperture (f2.8), DOF remains big and both violins stay always in focus.

Clever using of depth of field is a very powerful tool for a beginner photographer. You are getting the ability to focus user attention on the main subject. One of the most used application is using Depth of Field control for portrait photography. A photographer would use this technique to underline the face of the model by limiting DOF away from confusing background.

To summarize the idea, you need three things to minimize DOF :

  • open the aperture
  • be closer to the subject
  • zoom in (use the biggest number on zoom lens)
  • Posted by Polina Fedorova
  • On November 1, 2012
  • 0 Comments
  • 0 likes

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