Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/07/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]someone wrote: >>> I shouldn't make light of bokeh. There's probably something to it. It's just > > not important to me. I don't want to be concerned with things like out of > > focus rendering when I look at an image. I didn't notice it when I didn't > > know a word for it. Now that I know the word, I still don't notice it.<<< Hi Crew, Gee I don't feel lonely any longer, now I have a photo companion who feels as I do. In all my years of being a photojournalist I had always thought the most important part of a photograph was the "in focus" part! :-) Then one day some time ago "bokeh" appeared on the screen (look in the archives at least two-three years ago) and created sensational discussions for some weeks. Pro and con, but without question, one heck of a wild chat up, there were days I thought some might come to "bokeh blows" over the subject. Fortunately none beat physically on one another, but it was rumored a few computer screens suffered major melt down. ;-) To my surprise, I'm not surprised too often by things photographic, I was amazed how many people look at the out of focus back part of their pictures as an intrigal part of whether the photograph looks good or not. It must be true as the front in focus part was a lousy photograph at best! ;-) ;-) However, it was..."oooooooohhhhh, this lens has beautiful bokeh, that lens has terrible bokeh etc etc" and it was days before many of us figured out what the hell they were talking about. So with great trepidation I examined many of my published photographs over the years and found, yep some had a different look to the background, that part was true. Did it make the picture any better? Did it get published more often due to the "bokeh look?" Not that I could find. Questions, questions questions, doubt, doubt, doubt! How could I have missed such a major part of the photograph? I was thinking I had failed as a photographer, my goodness it was a terrible dilemma. Had I been wrong lo these many years because I hadn't created a nice out of focus look? Something so pretty everyone oooooohhhhhhed & aaaaaaaaaaawing over bohek and the main part of the picture was all for not? So crew as I had done for years, I flushed it from my mind and went on taking pictures with the important aspect being the "in focus front part and the out of focus back part, just the out of focus back part!" ;-) So before any of you who've just learned this bohek word and effect for the first time don't sweat it, forget it, go take your pictures with the innocents of yesterday, have fun without the bokeh dilemma! :-) :-) It don't mean nuthin' anyway! ;-) ted Ted Grant Photography Limited www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant