Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/12/26

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Subject: [Leica] Bokeh controversy
From: Jim Brick <jim_brick@agilent.com>
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2000 10:11:35 -0800

When you are out photographing, whether an intentional trip or you just
happened to be out and have your camera, you happen upon something to
photograph. A tree, a plant, a person, a portrait, a group, a landscape, a
piece of wood, a flower, kids. You size-up the situation, choose the
appropriate lens, set the f/stop to give the DOF you need, appropriate
shutter speed, and shoot. Perhaps bracket. Whatever... you just take the
photographs.

You get home, process or have the film processed. Put the slides in the
projector or put the film in the enlarger or scanner and show the slides or
make the prints. Again, whatever...

Then you look at the photographs and exclaim WOW, look at that keen Bokeh.
Or you don't.

The point is that while doing everything up to the point of actually
looking at the finished result, Bokeh was not something you were thinking
about. Perhaps secondarily or subconsciously. You were thinking of what
lens, what exposure, what DOF, etc. Most folks don't carry a 35/1.4
non-ASPH as well as a 35/1.4 ASPH so they can, on the spot, choose between
perceived smooth Bokeh and not so smooth Bokeh. It just isn't usually in
the equation when setting-up for making a photograph. And unless you are
photographing wide open (or close to it) Bokeh isn't a factor anyway. There
is no real choice with a 50mm or 75mm lens since they are all non-ASPH. Do
you carry two 90's? An old 90 Summicron and a new 90 APO/ASPH just so you
can choose? Bokeh city quickly turns into backache city!

Some lenses exhibit a nice looking blurred background (Bokeh) when used
wide open. The 35/1.4 non-ASPH, 50/1.4, 75/1.4, 85/1.4 and others. And some
don't.

But is that why you choose to use a lens in a particular situation?
Perhaps. But I suspect it is usually not thought of during photographing.
Only afterward when Bokeh happens to exhibit itself. Or not.

So in my estimation, the subject of Bokeh is academic. Something that is
obviously there, with certain lenses, but generally not the predominate
factor when taking a photograph. You use what you have with you. And unless
you are photographing wide open-ish, it is moot.

Jim

Replies: Reply from Jim Brick <jim_brick@agilent.com> ([Leica] Re: Bokeh controversy)