Tips and Guides » Photography » Photography tutorial – depth of field
Photography tutorial – depth of field
A photography tutorial on depth of field with Shelton Muller of Total Image magazine (www.total-image.com.au)
Related posts:
- Bryan Peterson’s Understanding Photography Field Guide: How to Shoot Great Photographs with Any Camera
- Wedding Photography: Wedding Photographer Tips For Great Wedding Pictures
- What is the best photography book for someone who is already very educated in the field of photography?
- The Best Photography Tips – Professional Wedding Photography
- What is the difference between photography and digital photography?
Filed under: Photography · Tags: depth, Field, Photography, Tutorial








I really Like this Video. Please keep it up just in case I have to come back to it.
@blacksunway it comes down to commitment, are you working at Walmart or are you a serious artist, do you think Ansel Adams used cheap lenses? I assure you that he didn’t. A life time of commitment and sacrifice has to be made. You have to spend every once of energy and every dollar to your commitment. Look at Charles Bukowski poor but every dollar went into his writing.
@23Solo i know…
@SingHouse you know what a gangbang is? like lots of guys, one girl…..
all I know is that I want to gangbang jessica
Hmm I read here something, Could it be because I am using a small Dv camera with a small optical sensor? at 1/6″ the sensor is very far from a tru 35 mm system
I cant seem to make any of these results nearly as identical as yours man, I have tried close and far distance, wide and long lenses, aperture size from F1.6 to much higher
I can achieve out of focus behind the subject, HOWEVER! I can never get a really blurry background behind a full body shot??
hey guys.. you can buy cheap cameras.. u can see the pricelist by copying this link and paste it on your address bar…cheap lenses and DSLR bodies.. enyo…. reuceballos.blogspot.com
@blacksunway It IS clear who the tutorial is directed. He’s just showing what can be done. If your limitations were all that were included, the lesson would be incomplete. You should also know that there are plenty of people who “can afford” and do, in fact, buy expensive equipment so your comment that only pros can afford the equipment is makes no sense. People who have enough money can afford expensive equipment.
look the best photography tips HERE: 8lRPKoK5sOc
thanks mate, very helpful!
@MegaAfroGuy I did not make myself clear. All P’n'S cameras does make DOF. But it is not strong one because the sensor is so small. When compared to (D)LSR cameras where you can have fullsize sensor, you get much stronger DOF so background is almost single color. But still depending aperture, distance and sensor size.
Just use tilt/shift lense with big sensor (now we are actually talking about architecture film cameras). Just put f:64 or f:128 and tilt it so DOF goes along the ground.
@TheFri13 well dof will happen with any lens, the blokeh wont be good at all but it will still work. everything being in prefect focus would mean having no dof, even with f36 on a 4/3 or f-22 on a p&s camera will still blur a bit
@SKTPSY No simple answer or overruling why digital SLR is better than film SLR. For normal user, the cost of film, development and so on is such that it can not be used so well. It is time consuming and with time, negatives/dias will suffer. DSLR gives faster the photos for use, allows easier (more in most cases) post-processing and on 2010 most espensive DSLR starts to have same quality as fiml cameras has with normal films.
And there is the price. With DSLR you can shoot as much as you want.
@yyyy2999 Reason is that with point-and-shoot cameras you have too small sensor on them to get the same effect with same settings as cameras with bigger sensor. You need to zoom out as much as possible and use smallest aperture to get better effect. The sensor size is reason why cameraphones and point’n'shoot cameras will never get same quality as DSLR’s. Same thing apply otherwise. DSLR’s can not have same effect as medium size or architecture cameras. All cameras has their power and weakness
@SmokenRocker There is magical number what applyis to every photographer. Only 5% of photos will be successfull. And that means what are your top photos what you can show to anyone. No matter how much you shoot, the 5% applies. But for controlled situations, you can gain more good photos what ain’t technically bad, but they just dont have the feel what you want, what are in those 5% photos. I have asked has any photographer succeed to overrule this continuesly and answer is no.
@FirebrandNIRE You can get. Just for potraits, use 85-100mm (36mm equilavent) (some people preferr 50-56mm (36mm) as what is the size what human eye sees) and focus so close as possible to get the subject as you want. Closer you are and longer focal you use, with small (as possible) f: then shorter the DOF will be.
When the subject range grows, then DOF will grow as well, even when using same f:. Example, f:5.6 at 45cm could give you a 8cm DOF. But focus to 15 meters and you have 5 meters DOF.
@MegaAfroGuy It is not possible with any camera and lense. DOF depends from aperture, subject distance and sensor size.
With P’n'S cameras you can not get that so well. Even with zoom cameras for 600mm (36mm) focal you get sharper background because the sensor is too small. That is one reason why many preferr cameras with full-size sensors so they can get more easily smaller DOF. Lenses on wide angle you can not get same effect as well than using long focal and same aperture size.
Hey guys. I am seeking people who wish to make good money using only their digital camera. Time to turn your passion into cash. Message me if you are interested and I will give my contact. Thanks!
Chris
Finally…..someone who explained the size of the lenses and aperture settings with examples. You sir, should have been paid for this. Thanks so much!
Check out my photography page: Just search Jonno Morley into Google and click the first facebook link
Good video, clearly explained. Thanks.
@MegaAfroGuy
Hey thanks,
I finally worked out anyways and got some good shots.
I also purchased a 50mm f/1.8 lens for my camera ,which is incredible for DOF.
The learning process continues however…..
Thanks for your help very much appreciated!!
@FirebrandNIRE first put the wheel on the top to the letter A then make the F-stop number as small as possible, focus your lens on what you are taking a picture of either by pushing the shutter button half way or twisting the focus ring and take the picture, you can do it with any camera and lens even a point and shoot
Please can someone help me with DOF? I’ve got a Nikon D90 with a 18-105mm lens, can I get DOF with this lens or am I wasting my time? I’m really clueless, but really wanna learn this stuff.
many thanks!!
I admire the valuable data you offer you in your articles. I will bookmark your blog and have my children examine up here generally. I am quite certain they will understand lots of new stuff the following than anybody else! Forex Software System Trading
Super page you are posting. I’m interested in excersise equipment. This content will make my ordeal easier.