View allAll Photos Tagged bokehful
Apologies for missing my upload yesterday - but don’t worry, I did capture this photo, I just didn’t have the energy to process/uploaded it! I’ve had a stomach bug and this photo pretty much sums my day up yesterday. I think I was awake for just 2 hours.
| a7riii | Mitakon Zhongyi Speedmaster 50mm f/0.95 | f/0.95 | 1/125s | ISO320 |
I bought an updated Commlite Canon to m/43 adapter which allows me to connect Canon lenses and allow me to use them with auto focus. I'm using the Canon 24mm f2.8 stm lens in this photograph. The adapter will only work with Canon lenses which have metal mounts but it will work with both ef and efs lenses.
I'm actually very surprised and impressed with how quick the auto focus actually works and in low light situations as well. It's not as quick as a native lens and you certainly wouldn't use it for action but it works and auto focus is pretty quick :)
Because the world doesn't end in B&W, unfocused, bokehful shots done with strange, manual lenses :) Nor the other way round, of course.
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Perquè el món no s'acaba pas en les fotos en BiN, desenfocades, amb bokeh i fetes amb lents manuals. Ni tot el contrari...
Hong Kong International Airport, Hong Kong
Contax Carl Zeiss Planar T* 85mm f/1.4
Sony A7
Yeah, Dustin is really inspirator and his photostream is a photography class!
Bokeh, from japanese, means something as “blur”. It’s a word used in photography to refer a aesthetic characteristics of the out focus areas of a photography. That carachteristic depends of lens and of the aperture used.
The bokeh is especially important to large aperture lens, macro lens and telephoto lens, because they’re usually used with small Depht of Field (DOF). The term DOF is many times misused and it can really make the people confused. The bokeh is a qualitative and subjective term, whereas Depht of Field is quantitative measurement.
Setup: Softbox with SB-800 (1/16 power) left camera and gold reflector right camera. Blue gelled SB-800 (1/16 @ 105mm) lighting a lot of wine glasses arranged on the kitchen table.
Camera info: Nikon D700 | 85 mm(ƒ/1.8D) | ƒ/1.8 | ISO 200 | 1/250 s — Handheld