When that aperture is listed on the lens.... what does that mean?
Photolistic Goldmember 1,632 posts Joined Aug 2006 Location: Oregon City, Oregon More info | Sep 13, 2006 03:42 | #1 Permanent banWhen that aperture is listed on the lens.... what does that mean? FOR SALE: Canon 30D, 10D, and D2000
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bidimagic Member 219 posts Joined Jun 2005 Location: Milano, Italy More info | Sep 13, 2006 03:50 | #2 If I understand what you mean ... it's the len's maximum aperture (e.g. f/4), aka is an indication of how bright (fast) a lens is. Marco
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DoctorDiesel Senior Member 394 posts Joined Jul 2006 Location: West of Scotland More info | Sep 13, 2006 04:00 | #3 Correct 40 yrs in photography and still learning from all you good people...Thanks
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TeeJay Goldmember 3,834 posts Likes: 4 Joined Jun 2005 Location: Warwickshire - UK More info | Sep 13, 2006 04:04 | #4 Just to expand on what bidimagic has said, either the maximum aperture is shown, and on expensive lenses the aperture has the ability to remain constant throughout its zoom range, (as explained above) OR the maximum aperture range is shown; as in f/3.5 - f/5.6 as aperture is also governed by the zoom setting (if it's a zoom lens, of course) so at one end of the zoom range the aperture (in my example) would be f/3.5, and if you were to zoom the lens to its other extreme, the f stop would be f/5.6 1DsMkIII | 1DMkIIN | 70-200 f/2.8L IS | 24-70 f/2.8L | 24-105 f/4L IS | 17-40 f/4L | 50 f/1.2L | WFT-E1 & E2 Transmitters - Click Here for setup advice | CP-E4 Battery Pack x 2 | ST-E2 | 580EX | 550EX | 430EXII | 420EX | Tripod + monopod | Bowens Esprit Gemini 500W/s heads & Travel-Pak | All this gear - and still no idea
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Sep 21, 2006 23:17 | #5 Permanent banok I dont understand the difference between f stop and apeture. FOR SALE: Canon 30D, 10D, and D2000
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RonaldS.Jr. Prodigal "Brick" Layer More info | Sep 21, 2006 23:20 | #6 The f-stop or f-value, is the same as the aperture (the aperture is also the literal "hole" on the rear of the lens). f#= focal length/diameter of lens. Mac users swear by their computers. PC users swear at theirs.
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Mark_Cohran Cream of the Crop More info | Sep 21, 2006 23:25 | #7 An f stop is one step of aperture change. It either doubles or halves the amount of light transmitted through the lens. f2.0 to f2.8 is one step down and reduces the amount of light through the lens by 1/2. Mark
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Sep 21, 2006 23:33 | #8 Permanent banok I think I understand. I did this in high school but its been 10 years. FOR SALE: Canon 30D, 10D, and D2000
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Bob_A Cream of the Crop More info | Sep 21, 2006 23:39 | #9 This may help: Bob
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Sep 21, 2006 23:42 | #10 The smaller the number the more light the lens will let in, the more light it lets in the faster it is. Christopher J. Martin
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sugarzebra Cream of the Crop More info | Sep 21, 2006 23:45 | #11 I would highly recommend Bryan Peterson's book "Understanding Exposure". It will explain aperture, f-stop & ISO in all the detail thats necessary as well as provide a lot of invaluable information to help you hone your skills. Scott
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JaGWiRE Goldmember 3,859 posts Joined Sep 2006 More info | Sep 22, 2006 17:31 | #12 sugarzebra wrote in post #2020248 I would highly recommend Bryan Peterson's book "Understanding Exposure". It will explain aperture, f-stop & ISO in all the detail thats necessary as well as provide a lot of invaluable information to help you hone your skills.
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RichNY Goldmember 1,817 posts Likes: 3 Joined Sep 2006 More info | Yes, it does an excellent job at explaining depth of field. The premise behind the book is that in order to expose a photo properly a certain amount of light is needed. There are 3 elements that can adjust the amount of light- ISO settting, aperature setting and shutter speed. Nikon D3, D300, 10.5 Fisheye, 35 f/1.4, 50 f/1.4, 85 f/1.4, Zeiss 100 f/2, 105 f/2.5, 200 f/4 Micro, 200 f/2, 300 f/2.8, 14-24, 24-70, 70-200, SB-800x4, SB-900, SU-800, (3) Sunpak 120J (2) Profoto Acute 2400s,Chimera softboxes, (4)PW Multimax, (6) C-stands, (3) Bogen Superbooms, Autopoles
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JaGWiRE Goldmember 3,859 posts Joined Sep 2006 More info | Sep 22, 2006 22:42 | #14 RichNY wrote in post #2023607 Yes, it does an excellent job at explaining depth of field. The premise behind the book is that in order to expose a photo properly a certain amount of light is needed. There are 3 elements that can adjust the amount of light- ISO settting, aperature setting and shutter speed. Your camera can take a properly exposed picture with several combinations of these settings however, there is usually one "creatively correct exposure". That special combination of a certain field of depth, and sharp stopped motion or blur that will give you the results you are hoping to achieve. You might also want to order the video http://www.ppsop.com/site/store.html Also highly recommended is his book on learning to see creatively. Totally non-technical but gets you really excited about photography for the purposes of making interesting images. It's all too easy to get caught up in the f-this, app-that, lens and camera discussions and forget what really brought us to photography in the first place- the desire to take great looking pictures.
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