Difference between revisions of "Bokeh"

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'''Bokeh''' (Japanese "boke" = blur or haze) is how a [[lens]] draws unsharp image areas. The effect becomes notable when the unsharp back- and/or foreground has significant contrasts, especially when small light areas contrast to darker surroundings. A typical bokeh effect is given by some lenses with six-blade aperture. Light points of the unsharp fore- or background are projected by these lenses as hexagonal lighter areas onto the image. Portraiture needs lenses with a pleasant or a soft undisturbing bokeh. Almost round apertures given by multi-blade [[diaphragm]]s are always a good precondition for a nice Bokeh, but don't necessarily deliver one. It depends on where in the lens the diaphragm is placed. In some extra-short lens constructions and zoom lenses necessary compromises might reduce nice bokeh results despite of nearly round aperture.
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'''Bokeh''' (Japanese "boke" = blur or haze) is how a [[lens]] renders unsharp image areas. The effect becomes notable when the unsharp background (or foreground) has significant contrasts, especially when small light points appear against darker surroundings. Portraiture particularly calls for lenses with a pleasant or soft, undisturbing bokeh.
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Defocused points of light will show the shape of the the aperture opening, and this can be distracting when it is noticeably hexagonal or octagonal. However simply redesigning a [[diaphragm]] to provide more a rounder opening does not guarantee pleasing bokeh.<ref>[http://rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-207.html "What's BOKEH, Anyway?"] by [http://rick_oleson.tripod.com/ Rick Oleson].</ref>  Other factors such as the degree of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_aberration spherical aberration] affect how light is distributed within the blur disk; and a complete optical analysis of bokeh can become quite complicated.<ref>[http://www.smt.zeiss.com/C12567A8003B8B6F/EmbedTitelIntern/CLN_35_Bokeh_EN/$File/CLN35_Bokeh_en.pdf Depth of Field and Bokeh, by Dr. H. H. Nasse (1.7 Mb PDF)] from Carl Zeiss [http://www.zeiss.com/cln Camera Lens News #35]</ref>.  
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Lens designers must balance many factors, such as in-focus sharpness, cost, and weight; and in some cases bokeh may be compromised to reach these goals. A lens's bokeh may be particularly jangly at its widest aperture, but smooth out considerably when closed down by 1 or 2 f/stops. But highly patterned background that is only slightly out of focus may give troubling bokeh regardless of the lens design.
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==References==
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<references/>
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==Links==
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* [http://www.rickdenney.com/bokeh_test.htm Bokeh Test] (scroll down for sample images), by [http://www.rickdenney.com/index.htm Rick Denny]
  
 
[[Category:Lens]]
 
[[Category:Lens]]

Revision as of 14:51, 23 February 2011

Glossary Terms

Bokeh (Japanese "boke" = blur or haze) is how a lens renders unsharp image areas. The effect becomes notable when the unsharp background (or foreground) has significant contrasts, especially when small light points appear against darker surroundings. Portraiture particularly calls for lenses with a pleasant or soft, undisturbing bokeh.

Defocused points of light will show the shape of the the aperture opening, and this can be distracting when it is noticeably hexagonal or octagonal. However simply redesigning a diaphragm to provide more a rounder opening does not guarantee pleasing bokeh.[1] Other factors such as the degree of spherical aberration affect how light is distributed within the blur disk; and a complete optical analysis of bokeh can become quite complicated.[2].

Lens designers must balance many factors, such as in-focus sharpness, cost, and weight; and in some cases bokeh may be compromised to reach these goals. A lens's bokeh may be particularly jangly at its widest aperture, but smooth out considerably when closed down by 1 or 2 f/stops. But highly patterned background that is only slightly out of focus may give troubling bokeh regardless of the lens design.

References

Links