Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/11/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 01:46 PM 11/9/00 -0700, John Collier wrote: >Please look in your library for books such as Ansel Adams' "The Camera" and >other similar books. You can read it there for yourself. > >DOF is determined by just two factors: final image size and relative >aperture used. Pg. 48-9 "The Camera" on Lenses: "There are two other factors that affect the depth of field: the focal length of the lens (change to a shorter focal length if you need more depth of field) and the subject distance (move away from the subject to increase the depth of field). These three factors, aperture, lens focal length, and subject distance, give us considerable flexibility in managing depth of field." I think the part that I was not taking into consideration in my thinking it out was camera to subject distance. >Perspective is a function of viewpoint only. Here too I knew what I was thinking in my head, but could not frame to pronounce it rightly so that you all knew what was in there as well. (scary, dark and cold in there mostly.) If you move camera position and wish to keep your main subject at a constant size in your composition, you need to change focal lengths. Doing so will compress or un-compress the perspective distance of any background elements. Again I was not taking into consideration mentioning the camera to subject distance in my previous posts. >Lens choice does not enter in at all. Take a picture with the subject >filling the frame with your 90 and 35 using the same aperture (you will have >to move closer with the 35). Print to the same size and you will get the >same depth of field. Yes moving closer to maintain the same subject size in the VF limits your DOF. Agreed. (Illustrated best by the focus scale representing greater distances closer together on the infinity side of the focus dial of every lens.) In clarification (to late?) Here is what I was thinking in first making mention of Allan's claim that FL has nothing to do with DOF: at f/16 my 40/2 Summicron-C gives me a DOF = about 5 ft to inf. at f/16 my 90/4 Elmar gives me a DOF = 25 ft to inf. (at f/16 a 90 Elmar has 20ft less minimum DOF available. The extra 20 ft. focusing latitude of the wider lens comes in handy when you are worried about focusing on a fast moving toddler. You just give up cropping in camera.) >Ansel has his answers illustrated and will be much easier to comprehend than >anything I can cram into my cable line. > >John Collier Now I can't find any reference to how cropping a printing in a wet darkroom can change the DOF that is static and set on the negative. (This might be in "The Print" which I don't have yet. But a cursory look in "The Negative" and my USArmy Photographic Applications Course manuals didn't yield it either.) How would Printing to the same (or different) size effect DOF at all? The focus of the negative in the enlarger is a flat plane, and has no depth to manipulate. Anyone know of a better forum for this discussion? Carpe Luminem, Michael E. Berube