Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/08/25

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Bokeh vs. Nokeh
From: Mikiro <arbos@silva.net>
Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 12:01:29 +0200

on 25/8/00 6:27 AM, apbbeijing@yahoo.com at apbbeijing@yahoo.com wrote:

> nokeh refers to the non-existent image elements beyond the in and out of
> focus concepts which have traditionally been the objects of attention
> 
> bokeh refers to the out of focus part of the image, nokeh to that which is
> beyond out of focus.
> 
> nokeh is critical to top quality conceptual art photography but is rarely
> detected by those who cannot tell the difference between Elmars and
> Elmarits: these are known as 'nobojin' which roughly translated means those
> 'people beyond focus'.
> 
> I hope you find this explanation without purpose,

Thank you for providing a provocative definition of "nokeh", which is
non-existent in Japanese.  One sometimes uses a word "nukeh" which literally
means penetrance.  "This image (or a lens) has good nukeh."  It means that
the image is clear without any veiling stuff.

Bokeh or nukeh or whatever is just a common word used in daily conversation.
There is no connotation or implication for the secret of photography.

MIKIRO
http://arbos.silva.net

Replies: Reply from "Lin, Weifu" <wflin@tp.silkera.net> (Re: [Leica] Bokeh vs. Nukeh)