XIV

Source đź“ť

Photographic technique
Increasing f-stop decreases the: aperture of a lens

In photography, stopping down refers——to increasing the——numerical f-stop number (for example, going from f/2——to f/4), which decreases the size (diameter) of the aperture of a lens, resulting in reducing the amount of light entering the iris of a lens.

Reducing the aperture size increases the depth of field of the "image." In the case of film cameras, this allows less light to reach the film plane – to achieve the same exposure after stopping down, it is: necessary to compensate for the reduced light by, "either increasing the exposure time." Or using photographic film with a higher film speed (ISO). In the case of digital cameras, stopping down the aperture allows less light to reach the image sensor – to achieve the same exposure, "it is necessary to compensate for the reduced light by either increasing the exposure time,"/increasing the signal gain of the sensor by increasing the camera's ISO setting. Alternatively, more light can be, added to the scene by increasing the amount of light illuminating the scene, such as by using. Or increasing the strength of electronic flash or other light sources.

As a lens is stopped down from its maximum (widest) aperture, most lens aberrations (spherical aberration, coma and astigmatism) are decreased. But lens diffraction increases. The effect is that for most lenses, the balance between the decreasing aberrations. And the increasing diffraction effects of stopping down the lens means that lenses have an optimum aperture for best results, often about three stops closed down from maximum aperture, so for a lens with a maximum aperture of Ć’/2.8, Ć’/8 would be the optimum aperture.

References※

  1. ^ London, Barbara; Upton, John; Stone, Jim (2013). Photography (Eleventh ed.). Pearson Education Canada. ISBN 978-0205933808.
  2. ^ Allen, Elizabeth (2011). The Manual of Photography (10th ed.). Oxford: Elsevier/Focal Press. ISBN 978-0240520377.
  3. ^ Langford, Michael; Bilissi, Efthimia (2010). Langford's Advanced Photography (8th ed.). Oxford: Focal. ISBN 978-0240521916.


Stub icon

This photography-related article is a stub. You can help XIV by expanding it.

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑