What Pros Know About APERTURE That Beginners Often Ignore
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- čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
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Chapters
00:00 Intro & Common Misconceptions
00:56 Big Hole VS Small Hole! Aperture Basics
02:08 How To Stop Missing Focus! Depth of Field Explained
03:16 How Zoom Affects Blurry Backgrounds
04:03 How Distance Affects Blurry Backgrounds
04:46 Why Photographing Wide Open All the Time is BAD
05:33 The Best Aperture?
06:13 How to Support The Channel!
One other thing that Jason didn't mention is that large apertures are good for blurring out foreground elements, like fences. If there's a fence between you and the subject, get as close as you can to the fence and open the aperture. You can often make the fence "disappear".
as an amateur photographer way back when, this blew my mind at family sporting events shooting through the fence lol
Beware, it makes your bokeh way funky. Better than having a fence in view tho
@@kai.05 If your lens is long enough, fast enough, and you can get close enough, you can make chain link fence disappear.
@@careylymanjones yeah the fence definitely dissappears. I shoot those kinds with my 100-400 5-6.3, and you can't see the fence at all in the foreground. But, since you're adding another shape to the bokeh by having the fence so close, you don't really get circle bokeh anymore. You get circle with a diamond etched into it, which is cool, but not always desirable. Definitely a worthy tradeoff though
I shoot mainly sports and wildlife. Having the ability to open up the aperture wide as possible gives a better ability to keep your speed up and ISO down as as much as possible when you can’t use flash.
As someone that shoots 99% extreme low light (concert photography), I have a tendency to completely forget that aperture exists outside of wide open. It's definitely something I need to improve in my photography.
What f stop do you use?
Honestly, technology for digital photography has advanced so much that your best bet is to shoot everything at your lens's sharpest F-stop (often around F8) and then just let your digital darkroom/Photoshop software handle the depth of field and lens blur later. For concerts you usually don't have to shoot entirely wide open to get the performers (unless the lighting people suck) but yeah, if you hope to get halfway decent shots that include the crowd and surroundings you probably shouldn't push it unless you have a flagship body that can do extremely high ISO settings. Again, denoising software has come such a long way you really can afford to crank up the ISO and fix it later.
@@stevenleonmusicLightroom has a decent ability to do this now but it isn’t perfect yet. However, I’m a beta tester for upcoming improvements, and let me tell ya, it’s quickly getting much much better. I think after another year or two your advice will be spot on.
@@l.e.phillips Well the closer it is to perfect out of the camera, the less work you have to do in post, so usually I do recommend attempting to get it right in camera if you can. That said, it really just depends on the context. I think focus correction is currently at a good spot for social media and self-promotion. If you're making money off your photography, then you might want to wait for the tech to improve slightly. For low-resolution work though, what we have is more than enough and even what we had before the AI stuff was too.
@@stevenleonmusic I respect your take, but I disagree with you here. My principle is that the better it is straight out of the camera, the better it will be after editing, and as we’re on the topic of concert photography (or low-light event photography in general), the best thing to do, in my opinion, is move around and figure out the settings, which is not that difficult, and you’ll end up with much cleaner images, which doesn’t hurt even if you’re images will be viewed through social media most of the time.
Ive lately been a big fan of higher f-stop numbers like f8 or f11.
1. I shoot a lot of weddings and I feel like clients choose their venue because they like how it looks a lot so I want to show how the environment and location looks in the photo clearly along with the people in it.
2. Higher F stops allows me to use Photoshop to easily to remove unwanted artifacts in the background.
3. Bokeh has become so popular that every beginner of Photographer uses it now that it’s not a unique look anymore.
Agree
>3
It was never a unique look.
Curious - what does higher F stop have to do with Photoshop and removing unwanted artifacts?
@@RogerC yeah, when everything is in focus it’s a lot easier to make selections and then remove. Whereas when it’s blurred out, the selection is less perfect and content aware ,generated fill, spot fill or patch tools has a much harder time getting it right.
true story bro
The most important thing to emphasize is practicing with your camera and lenses is important. I learn new things every wedding I work. I actually realized I could drop the f stop and still get blurry backgrounds one day when I forgot my VND i usually use on my 50mm 1.4 and had to shoot outside. I had to go to 5.6 to get usable exposure for my video, but the closer i got for intimate shots I realized the background was still a bit bokeh (granted, not as much as I would have preferred but still good). Plus lots of lenses are sharper stopped down than wide open.
My dad did a good job of explaining this to me in1960. I had to learn "sunny 16" back then because I shot with a manual camera, no light meter, and by the seat of my pants. Man those days were fun! Yes, I have several new cameras, but I also shoot an Argus C-3 .... a true manual, manual camera. You did a great tutorial video here... great info for those of us with 60 years of photography behind us. I say that because I'll never say I've learned it all!
Great video! Two things that have ruined modern photography are pixel peepers and bokeh worshippers. Typically neither one of these groups has any skill either. They wouldn't know a quality photograph if it bit them, they are too busy zooming into 400% and sitting an inch from their huge monitor looking for imperfections. Its been fueled by CZcamsrs playing photographer who push the latest 1.2 lens and absurdly overpriced "flagship" FULL FRAME camera as the only thing you need to get great photos 🤣 Ive been a professional fashion/portrait shooter almost 20 years and have shot with tons of gear from all manufacturers. You can get awesome shallow DOF in a portrait with an Olympus 75 1.8 on a tiny little M43 sensor camera. Ive done it and had shots published in magazines. No one would ever go hey wait a minute, thats a M43 sensor camera! What makes a great photograph is lighting and composition, not how blurry the background is or how creamy the bokeh balls are 😂
Hello, I'd like to point out that it's not 'larger the number smaller the hole and vice versa.' Even my teacher at uni gets this wrong. It's not f 16 or f 1.4; it is f/16 or f/1.4 -- meaning f 1/16 or f 1/1.4. Now we know with the numerator same, if the denominator is bigger the number is smaller. Like ½ is 0.5 and ¼ is 0.25. So 1/1.4 > 1/16 and technically 'bigger the number bigger the hole.'
I learned something today! Thanks!
The technical correctness isn’t always the best way to learn, being that what a first time photographer would see in their settings (on screen) is how Jason presented it.
🤓
bruh, as much as I would want to say you are technically correct, you cannot discredit what he was saying. You need to listen to what he is saying in the proper “context” he was presenting it. And that context is that he is pertaining and presenting it in the context of the lens aperture ring itself which is given by the value of denominators. He presented it in both the actual lens as well as with the actual written fraction. So if you really listen, he is correct. Stop discrediting people to show you know something. Your professor might be correct and it’s just that you prefer not to listen to understand - At the end of the day, he won’t be just one smart ass guy trying to look smart, your professor got his degree and credentials to teach so he ain’t stupid.
k nerd
Always nice to get a primer in the basics. Nothing wrong with some review.
It was nice to hear someone say what it took me a few years to learn myself. You are a great teacher. Keep it up. Big fan.
Great refresher Jason! Love the energy and enthusiasm.
Thank you! I've been looking for a video like this for some time now and you finally delivered one covering the basic needs, helped out a lot!
This is the tutorial that I'm looking for so longggg time. Others are just explaining the meaning of Aperture but thank you for creating this in depth teachings
Great video! I really liked the demonstration on the iPad with the focus leeway.
Low f-stop is such a beginner trap - I say this as someone who just picked up photography earlier this year and has had this revelation myself in the last month or so. I think every beginner photographer naturally wants to play with bokeh, because in their eyes it's what makes their photos stand out against a photo taken say on a phone (although many phones can fake bokeh these days). As you mature as a photographer, you start to realise:
a) bokeh can be achieved in several ways without a super low f-stop, and
b) you don't always need bokeh. if you're relying on bokeh for good photos, you need to learn more about what makes a good photo i.e interesting compositions, subjects and lighting.
As an amateur photographer I have to say low apertures give you more freedom of movement, I mean you can control DoF on bigger distances
thanks for the videos Jason!!❤
Love the visuals, especially the top down view to help drive the point home!
Great explanation. A good reason to save money on buying bokeh beast lenses however, is the rapidly emerging DOF tools in post processing software. Lightroom/ACR is absolutely amazing. Sure ...you must spend some time on each selected image and there is a learning curve, but the control is amazing. I'm sure those features will be available in batch processing before long, so a bunch of similar images can be selected and what was shot in focus from the end of one's nose to infinity will take on the look of having been shot with a much larger aperture.
This is the exactly what I needed!! Thanks always ❤
Great stuff Jason! Super well explained!
Great explanation, thank you. I especially liked the "overhead" illustration.
Great breakdown of this topic, Jason!
Thanks for sharing!
This is such a great, concise video. Thank you!
This video spoke to my photography soul and said, "Stop it!" 👍🏾 Thanks.
I love your videos and how relevant and accessible you make information. This would have been really handy six or seven years ago. When I was starting out the professional side
Great stuff. This is definitely critical for beginners. I've learned the hard way. I've done group photo shoots for corporate clients. Three or four people in the photos doing work, etc., and I wanted some blurry background. I was using between f2.8 and f4. I couldn't tell in my camera screen that one person was in focus while others were out of focus. I got home to review the photos on my computer and nearly all the photos were ruined because half of the people were badly out of focus. I should have definitely used f8 or higher. Hopefully others learn from my mistake which is why I wanted to share. Cheers!
Fantastic top level video for beginners and intermediate level. Take each chapter and go practice! So much information to unpack.
This really helped me understand that distance from the object really matters. As a noob, I've been looking at it as "getting the person or the object in focus is the only thing I can control." But now i see that distance plays a big role in hiw the background looks.
Thanks.
Yea, in regular camera mode with your phone, you can have very blurry backgrounds by shooting from very close to your subject!
Jason, Thank you for creating this video. It was extremely helpful. I've been making many of these mistakes.
Very useful info. Thanks for the refresher course.
Great video - I often get caught up in shooting wide open and this is a great reminder! THank you!
Excellent video! Thanks for the breakdown.
Great vid mate, well edited to the point and heaps of value in it. Saving this as an example of how to make a video guide. 🔥
I love your approach at explaining this!
Very informative. Thank you so much for this!
great video! this is genuinely going to be helpful for me!
great video! very good info. thanks jason!
Thank you for your work on this video.
Thanks to professor too.
Got the basics covered very nicely! Keep it up man!
Brilliant video. Thanks for the detailed explanation.
This helped me figure out what lens I wanna buy and reminded me of some of the stuff I had forgotten from film school, thanks so much!
thank you for the video, hopefully more tutorial from you soon. Composition, editing process ..
This was great 👍 Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us, much appreciated
Thanks Jason for these crystal clear explanations !
This video is really helpful and just in time for my new camera. Thanks!
Fantastic video Jason!
Outstanding video Jason!!!
Superb! Many thanks! 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you...this is really helpful!!!
Great video!
Thanks for the video ❤
solid tips thanks
This was a game changer for me thank you
This was a crazy helpful video. Any newbie like myself should watch this I have been struggling to take not just clear pictures but low light as well as as someone said in the comment buying all these lenses without knowing how they work is a newbie trap. I have been gotten
Excellent explained!
nice video & I love your explaining style !
What's amazing is I have already been doing some of the stuff you have mentioned here just by taking photo after photo after photo. But still, thanks for breaking everything for us in this video. 😎 Everything we do (and learn) on the fly makes a lot more sense now. 😁
More of these please
Good, easy coverage on the basics 👌
Banger vid Jason, I dig it - Just got my Tamron 17-70mm f 2.8 so this is good timing.
Nice man! Great lens! One of the best for APSC!!
That was an amazing, crystal-clear explanation! Thanks for that! The shallow vs deep depth of field makes much more sense to me now! You didn't mention the influence in low-light environments, though. Is having the lowest aperture always the best in low-light cases?
Love the text overlays in this videos. Nice work Jason 🎉
Great video! 🙏🏽
Very good Video !!
Perfect explanation, keep providing content like this💪🏼🔥
Thanks for putting this in a format most of us can understand and not making it confusing.👍
Great explanation, always something to learn.
Very well explained. excellent!
Love this vid❤️
That was very good!
I wish so badly I learned this 2 year ago. I was so surface level and didn't go to school for it. Its like learning the little caveats came up only when I challenged myself with different type of photography.
The THICC DOF simulation on the tablet with camera and pencil is such a good visual presentation. This is very key idea on why shooting widest may lead to out of focus shots more often. A mistake I made for years. I think what could be improved is to visualise in this same manner what you said for the wedding photos: with constant aperture, DOF gets more thicc with distance.
Incredibly helpful video 👌
Good stuff.
Thanx!
Great explanation! I'm still be to the scene and only doing as a hobby. I have my nice little f1.4 Sigma lens on my zv-e10 and find these points very useful! Will use these tips
This is insanely informative!
I appreciate this Jason! I just got into photography and I was thinking exactly what you were talking about, low f-stops every time 😭, which is not always a good thing
Damn. The most well explained video so far! Thanks !
Amazing and fun video ❤
finally i know what is aperture all about.. thanks for sharing such amazing information ! I learn something today!
very happy to heard that! 😁
Great video Jason, mahalo!
Rock solid video
That is a great video.👍 I guess that could not be explained better, faster and easier. Well done my friend. (No doubt you will be inspiring the photo lessons I am planning to give in the next months.)
Brilliant video! This is EXACTLY the situation I find myself taking photos from and was explained beautifully. I learned a huge amount from this! Awesome
Great advice
Nice use of the Motion vfx Podcast presets! Also this is a great explanation of depth of field, vieiwng it as a line which is bigger or smaller based on aperture is really smart.
Top notch video!:)
Ok this was good 👍🏻
Thank you!
Good explanation bro
thank you for your great video. I saw you many times at Akihabara.
This is a great video, more tutorials please
As someone who taught photography for over 20 years I never met any beginner who shot wide open. I met a lot of beginners who didn't understand what aperture was and never knew when to change it if anything. Just saying.
It was one of the first things I learned as a beginner. Someone explained to me about shooting in aperture priority and that to get the nice blurry effect around a subject, use the smallest aperture number available and if I wanted to get everything into focus, use a higher aperture number like f/8 or f/11. I didn't understand why a smaller number means more bokeh or larger number means less but I didn't worry about it at the time. And I did like the look so I did shoot wide open often, too often sometimes.
As a long time photo instructor, you did a great job! High 5!
thank you!
I learned more about this topic than ever. I’ve been obsessed with these low numbers, but now realize it doesn’t matter for the content I make.
Thanks mate
Very Neat Video ❗️. Sooooo TRUE 👍
Thank you!!!
Best explanation on the internet!
Thank you for the tips dude! I really learned a lot. Holy I had no idea about anything about aperature besides it being good for blurry background with a subject.
Great Content! Subsribed!
You’re the best 🔥
Thank you