by WildGuruLarry » Thu Apr 22, 2010 1:19 pm
Amir wrote:aperture is the diameter of the Lens/Mirror & could not be referred as f/x i guess.
the one you mentioned (f/8) is focal ratio (aperture/focal length). which i've heard the term "Diaphragm" (=a device for varying the effective aperture of the in a camera or other optical system) instead of focal ratio when talking about Cameras.
A "diaphragm" is a device for controlling aperture, but nobody really talks about that directly, unless they are discussing how many blades it has. The aperture is the diameter of the opening in the diaphragm. "f/8" would be the focal ratio like you said, but it is also the aperture. For example, on a 50mm lens, if you set a focal ratio of f/8, then the aperture will be equal to f/8, or 50mm/8, or 6.25mm. So most people would say "shoot with an aperture of f/8", rather than "shoot with a diaphragm of f/8". At least, in my experience in North America.
Amir wrote:thanks for the hint, i'm gonna try it some day. would f/8 be still appropriate when you're waiting for lightening with open shutter (like this APOD Picture)?
It really depends on a lot of factors, but that's where I would start (probably with ISO 100 and exposure time of 30s), and then I would adjust accordingly after a few test shots to make sure the background is being exposed properly.
I wish the EXIF data had not been stripped from this photo (and all of his others as well, as far as I can find). It is a very useful instructional tool for us budding photographers.
[quote="Amir"]aperture is the diameter of the Lens/Mirror & could not be referred as f/x i guess.
the one you mentioned (f/8) is focal ratio (aperture/focal length). which i've heard the term "Diaphragm" (=a device for varying the effective aperture of the in a camera or other optical system) instead of focal ratio when talking about Cameras.[/quote]
A "diaphragm" is a device for controlling aperture, but nobody really talks about that directly, unless they are discussing how many blades it has. The aperture is the diameter of the opening in the diaphragm. "f/8" would be the focal ratio like you said, but it is also the aperture. For example, on a 50mm lens, if you set a focal ratio of f/8, then the aperture will be equal to f/8, or 50mm/8, or 6.25mm. So most people would say "shoot with an aperture of f/8", rather than "shoot with a diaphragm of f/8". At least, in my experience in North America. :)
[quote="Amir"]thanks for the hint, i'm gonna try it some day. would f/8 be still appropriate when you're waiting for lightening with open shutter (like this APOD Picture)?[/quote]
It really depends on a lot of factors, but that's where I would start (probably with ISO 100 and exposure time of 30s), and then I would adjust accordingly after a few test shots to make sure the background is being exposed properly.
I wish the EXIF data had not been stripped from this photo (and all of his others as well, as far as I can find). It is a very useful instructional tool for us budding photographers.