www.jeffwignall.com

I'll Teach You Photography for Free!

Home

Google Search Results

My Books

Tutorials I

A Lens Aperture Primer, I

Lens Aperture Primer II

Lens Aperture Primer III

Lens Aperture Primer IV

Wide-angle Lenses

Sunset Photo How-to

Sunset Photos II, Timing

Sunset Photos III

Photographing Action

Photographing the Moon

Night Photography

High ISO or Long Exposure

Photographing Neon Signs

Zooming Technique: Night

Night City Skylines

Night Portrait Mode

Sparkler Portraits

Fireworks Displays

Lights in Motion

Using High ISO Speeds

The Depth Illusion

More on Depth Illusions

Exposure Tips Tutorial

Weather Photography

Tutorials II

Flower Photography Tips

Maine's Wild Lupines

Wildlife from Cars

Specular Highlights

Candid Group Photos

Gaussian Blur

Lighting: Frontlight

Tell A Story

Design: Keep it Simple

Landscape Composition

Fun with Silhouettes

Photograph People at Work

Creating Scanner Photos

Using a Tripod

Sky Replacement

Hue & Saturation

Photoshop Photo Filters

Photoshop Curves Tutorial

Adorama Academy

Dynamic Design Tips

DSLR Sensor Dust

Tutorials III

Use a Photographer's Vest

Shoot Animals at the Zoo

Photoshop: Add Textures

Black Light Photography

Polarizing Filters

Fun Travel Portraits

DSLR Dynamic Range

Clone Stamp Tutorial

Butterfly Photography

Get Closer to Subjects

Rainbow Photography

Galleries

Stonington, Maine

Flowers & Plants

Saguaro Cactus

Landscapes

Notre Dame de Paris

Le Chateau de Chenonceau

Birds

Night Gallery

Beyond Reality

People

Professor Louie & The Crowmatix Live

Leon Russell in Concert

Pete Seeger at 89

Sunset Photos Slide Show

Camera Buying

Camera Buying Help

Camera Categories

Compact Cameras

Advanced Zoom Cameras

Consumer D-SLR Cameras

Pro D-SLR Cameras

WPKN Radio

Paul Newman

About

Contest Book Interview

Contact

Links

Pop Photo Columns

Profiles

Peter Essick Profile

Brian Oglesbee

Subhankar Banerjee


Lens aperture terminology, an introduction: A simple explanation of what lens apertures are and how where the f/stop numbering system came from.
A Lens Aperture Primer: Everything You Need to Know About f/stops
photo of Stonington Harbor, Maine by Jeff Wignall
In some situations you'll want to create a lot of near-to-far sharpness (called "depth of field") and that requires using a smaller aperture. You'll learn all about aperture size in this tutorial.
photo of young girl blowing bubbles by Jeff Wignall
In other situations, of course, you'll want to limit depth of field to a very shallow area. In this photo of a young girl blowing bubbles, I intentionally chose a large aperture to restrict focus to her face.
Lens Apertures: An Introduction

If you're going to truly understand how your camera controls exposure, it's important that you understand the two primary physical controls of how light gets into your camera: lens aperture and shutter speed. The two (along with the ISO speed you've set on your camera) have total and exclusive control over how light enters your camera, reaches your light-sensitive sensor and records the exposure. In this tutorial we'll take a look at lens apertures or, as they're usually referred to in photo shorthand:  f/stops.

The primary function of the lens aperture is to let light into your camera. No aperture, no light. The ability to adjust aperture size gives you profound and precise control over exactly how much light reaches your camera's sensor. If that were all there were to the aperture story, of course, this would be a very short tutorial.  But there is, of course, more to the story--and this tutorial is where the fun and sexy part of apertures comes to life.

One of the by-products of having an adjustable aperture is that, because of the physics of optics, a very interesting thing happens as you change he aperture size: the amount of near-to-far focus (also called depth of field) changes. That small fact is one of the most creative and interesting tools that you have access to as a photographer. The ability to shift what is and what isn't in focus, beyond the actual point of sharp focus, gives you extraordinary control over how viewers interpret your subjects. You can, for example, toss backgrounds totally out of focus (fun to use in portraits) or pull everything in a scene into sharp focus (something you'll use often in landscapes).

Before I begin to explain the fun and magic of depth of field (that's coming in a separate tutorial) though, I'm going to first present a gathering of technical concepts and definitions closely related to apertures. There really aren't that many technical things to remember about apertures, but understanding the concepts and being familiar with the lingo will be quite useful. One of the great things about learning how apertures work and understanding the terminology, especially if you own a DSLR, is that this information will help you when it comes to shopping for lenses. Much of what makes lenses expensive (or inexpensive) is related to their aperture system.

Here's something else you might find interesting: Lighting and subject aside, the thing I think about most when I'm taking pictures is aperture. Knowing what will or won't be in focus is very important to me when I'm shooting and so are things like the brightness of the viewfinder (which you'll see shortly is related to aperture size). In fact, if you were to tap me on the shoulder when I was about to shoot a picture (and I'll discourage that idea right here and now) you would likely interrupt just one thought: Am I using the right aperture?


Lens-Aperture Primer, Part I (An Introduction)

Lens-Aperture Primer, Part II (The f/stop Numbering System Explained)

Lens-Aperture Primer, Part III (Lens Speed Explained)

Lens-Aperture Primer, Part IV (Variable-Aperture Zoom Lenses Explained)

Take me to the pretty sunset photos



Follow JeffWignall on Twitter


Entire Site Contents Copyright 2012 Jeff Wignall
An Ambitious Dogs Production
In Association with Boo Boo & Mama Cat Films
Please also visit my Photo Tip of the Day blog.

Website powered by Network Solutions®