Focal Length Explained 1 - Don't just zoom - MOVE!

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2012
  • Get creative with your lenses. The best 'zoom' lens is your feet! Why? Because changing focal length on your lens changes how your photo will look. It's best friends with composition. Once you know in what way different focal lengths (or zooms) will affect your images - you can begin choosing a zoom setting because of creative reasons rather than simply zooming in and out hoping it'll look good.
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @diego11032000
    @diego11032000 9 лет назад +1372

    Did anyone else get super nervous when he placed the lens on the top of the trash can?? Drove me nuts

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +63

      So long as the trash can doesn't move (and there's no reason why it would) it'll be fine Diego Alonso :-)

    • @diego11032000
      @diego11032000 9 лет назад +81

      Mike Browne Haven't you ever watched Sesame Street?! :P

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +13

      Once or twice many years ago Diego Alonso :-)

    • @jillbrammer7391
      @jillbrammer7391 7 лет назад +4

      I gasped!!

    • @delusionfrag1
      @delusionfrag1 7 лет назад +49

      what unerved me more was the fact that he did not put on the front and back lens cap, it made my psudo OCD go amok. dust is enemy nr1

  • @SJPlays_
    @SJPlays_ 5 лет назад +329

    this vid is 6 years old, yet the quality is 👌👌👏👏

  • @N00bCore
    @N00bCore 10 лет назад +232

    I have literally spent hours watching videos about photography on youtube and you sir are the most informative and easy to understand. thank you

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад +10

      Thank you Ok Bro that's very kind of you. Please help me grow the channel and make more by sharing the videos here, on Facebook, forums etc :-)

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +64

    +Nasser Alsharaf I can't answer your comment directly - you need to change your G+ settings. No I'm not saying don't zoom. I'm saying choose the zoom setting for the look you want then move yourself to make things fit the frame the way you want them to.

    • @witcheater
      @witcheater 9 лет назад +2

      Thanks for sharing anew.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  8 лет назад +2

      Gerard Kuzawa thank you for the kind words - MELISSA ( for Mike )

    • @tmrknox
      @tmrknox 7 лет назад

      Mike Browne 9$
      U

    • @YohanesNiko
      @YohanesNiko 6 лет назад

      Are you saying use zoom to get the distortion / strech / bulginess / compression (or whatever it is called) level you want then move around to compose?

  • @PhillipMcCordall
    @PhillipMcCordall 11 лет назад +158

    I can't understand why this has any thumbs down, it's the best video I've seen on the subject, well explain and great examples.
    Well done Mike.

    • @PhysicsOfParkour
      @PhysicsOfParkour 3 года назад +4

      The larger the focal length, the More satisfied the subjects!!!

    • @commentforthealgo5383
      @commentforthealgo5383 6 месяцев назад

      with the numbers I have now 10 years in the future, it has a 97% upvote. I guess its a long exposure rating

    • @50shadesofgayy
      @50shadesofgayy Месяц назад

      Except that he is fundamentally incorrect about the relationship between focal length and compositional perspective. He keeps moving back, and therefore keeps changing his perspective. Focal length has nothing to do with this and you CANNOT get the same shot if you move WHATSOEVER. He should be explaining this in terms of minimum focus distance, field of view and magnification… not perspective. All he’s doing is showing you how to change perspective which applies the same way to any lens of any length if they’re mounted to a camera that is fixed in space. Focal length, to be crystal clear, does nothing at all to change your perspective and that’s how he is explaining this.

  • @DoctorMGL
    @DoctorMGL 5 лет назад +67

    holy ####... a 2012 tutorial like this was helpful more then those 2019 tutorials on youtube this days
    thank you so much man !

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  5 лет назад +1

      Delighted to have helped SUB HDR... Please help me make more like it by sharing it around... MIKE :-)

    • @mosk11tto
      @mosk11tto 3 года назад

      @@MikeBrowne Old but gold!

  • @AdityaMahat
    @AdityaMahat 7 лет назад +194

    Thank you for breaking the concept of focal length in such a simple yet elegant demonstration. Now i understand it well. Onceagain thank you.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад +1

      Pleasure's mine Aditya Mahat - MIKE

  • @paulgoode8978
    @paulgoode8978 5 лет назад +19

    OMG never realised how different focal lengths affect my images until I tried your tip (I'm a newbie). Many thxs

  • @eddewhurst7662
    @eddewhurst7662 5 лет назад +15

    A good video on an often overlooked topic.
    When I was on a group holiday in northern India, everyone was keen to get pictures of the mighty Kanchenjunga (3rd highest mountain in the world). The guides knew a spot where you could sit with some flowers around and with Kanchenjunga behind. I was the first to arrive and picked my spot to take the photograph several yards back from the seat. The rest of the party arrived and all started taking pictures of their partners from close range. They had almost all finished when one of the party declared how disappointing it was that that when she framed the picture the mountain behind looked so small and not at all how she visualised it.
    I suggested she stepped back to where I was standing and to try again, she was amazed that by zooming in so her partner was the same size in the frame, the mountain behind now looked enormous. Having been a keen photographer for a number of years, I was surprised at how many people had not realised how you can change a composition by changing your viewpoint and the focal length of your lens.
    I have heard photographers say your feet are your best zoom lens, but sometimes it is the two together that deliver the results you want.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you @Focus Pocus. Awesome story of how to use this technique ... MIKE :-)

  • @artificialinsolence3182
    @artificialinsolence3182 5 лет назад +38

    In film, this effect we witnessed here is called dolly zoom. The focus stays on the fixed object, but the camera moves backward or forward, so it opens up or narrows down the field of view while the focused object stays the same size. Good for eerie or surreal shots, prominent examples being Vertigo or Goodfellas.

    • @50shadesofgayy
      @50shadesofgayy Месяц назад

      Yeah but he explained this as “getting the same shot” with different focal lengths at different distances and that’s actually not even possible. Because that’s not possible, that is why the dolly zoom IS possible. You are shifting object parallax when you move in space and that’s what determines your composition and zooming in does nothing but magnify. Whether he understands that or not is unclear because he’s explaining it in a fundamentally nonsensical way.

  • @rjfotovideo
    @rjfotovideo Год назад +6

    10 years ago since I saw this first time.
    I always recommend you Mike for people wanted to learn photography, and go watch your videos, because you is a really good teacher.

  • @MarlonKingShow
    @MarlonKingShow 5 лет назад +26

    "I hate camera straps, they drive me around the bend" - worth it for that lol

    • @GeneSquires
      @GeneSquires 4 года назад +1

      Marlon King nobody knows what it means but it’s provocative!!

  • @jollyrogerhobbies2386
    @jollyrogerhobbies2386 5 лет назад +6

    I'm an amateur photographer. I found this out (focal length) one morning by accident. Was shooting a Silver Frost in Wyoming USA, shot with a 18-55MM Cannon kit lens, then changed to a 75-300MM and grabbed a VERY nice shot of a close up of a branch with a half inch of frost on it. The background became a very nice BOKEH . One of my favorite shots today. Learned a very good lesson about Focal Length that day, confirmed by your video, thank you.

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +19

    +brianminkc I can't reply on your post "moral of the story .... shoot all your portraits with a 500 millimeter lens?" - you need to change your G+ privacy settings. Not really because it depends on where you are and what you want the portrait to look like. If you want a portrait that shows the environment or is wacky / dramatic, then a much shorter lens would be better. If you want to do the opposite then 200 - 500mm is an option.

    • @JohannaMueller57
      @JohannaMueller57 9 лет назад +1

      i'd say: if it is going to be a *portrait*, you shouldn't go neither too close nor too far, but a big focal length is more forgiving at this point.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  Год назад

      @@JohannaMueller57 It is. However go for the distance and focal length that gives you the look you want. For example if you want a wacky look use wide and get in close, natural around 80mm (50 on crop). I've seen some stunning portraits shot with short lenses by the way... MB 🙂

  • @adude394
    @adude394 8 месяцев назад +2

    "Zoom with your feet": That was the first thing I needed to learn once I moved away from the 18-55mm kit lens and started to work with primes.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  8 месяцев назад +1

      Glad you got it!

  • @tilerman
    @tilerman 8 лет назад +17

    Thank you Mike, Natasha and camera man for all your time, effort and knowledge.

  • @atbien21
    @atbien21 5 лет назад +3

    Thank Mike for pointing out something that even seasoned photographers know, but often forget. And thanks for taking the time to do these informative videos.

  • @RedNGold
    @RedNGold 8 лет назад +21

    Thank you Mike and Natasha for this wonderful explanation! :)

  • @ogilvy85
    @ogilvy85 8 лет назад +81

    ahh thats the first time i understood focal lengths. Thanks Mike!

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  8 лет назад +7

      thank you +ogilvy85 we are delighted whenever there's one that get's the "Eureka" feeling! - Melissa pp Mike

    • @jcee6886
      @jcee6886 6 лет назад

      Mike Browne agreed. Great bit of info to use.

  • @AndykSuper2
    @AndykSuper2 8 лет назад +7

    this is one of my favourite videos....It's amazing how an the focal length can change the shape of a face.

  • @gennidee
    @gennidee 7 лет назад +91

    Sad thing is that many photographers mistake having a maximum of blur in the background (by using the longest focal length they could dig out of their photo shelf) with making a good portrait. Actually people tend to look flat, like having a pancake face, the longer the distance is. My thoughts are: the person you are taking a picture of should have about the distance to the camera that it would have when you looked at this person with your own eyes. Not that nose to nose situation and not too far away either. Just the distance that is conventional when talking to people. Because only then you have the right amount of depth in the persons face. The nose doesn't stick out like Pinocchio because you're too close, but the face is not flat either, because you're too far away. A person will have the most natural proportions if the photographer has a "normal" distance to his subject. That includes backing off a bit for a full body picture because people don't tend to look at other people at a talking distance when they want to get an overview over the whole person, for instance when being asked by a person if an outfit looks good on him or her. Just my thoughts. Of course it all comes down to personal preference. I just think that this "I shoot my portraits only at the 200mm end" dogma is based on the wrong preferences, because it's not mainly about the background but about the subject. There are wider lenses, like the 50/1.2 or 85/1.4, that produce tons of background blur but deliver a much more natural look. Also they place the subject in a context by giving some vague informations about the surroundings of the person rather then bluring everything until it is only a plain one-coloured background.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад +10

      thank you for the valuable input and yes each has their own cup of tea - Melissa pp Mike :)

    • @duanestarmer2963
      @duanestarmer2963 6 лет назад +3

      Mike Brown , thank you for this teaching moment on focal length, you put it in easy to understand step by step .......well back step instructions. I have watched many vids on this subject, this one it all clicked into place.

    • @ceeIoc
      @ceeIoc 5 лет назад

      so shallow depth of field doesn't equal more blur? I thought the closer you are to the subject, the shallower depth of field.

    • @akaemzett
      @akaemzett 5 лет назад +2

      @@ceeIoc There are four factors that determine depth of field: distance, focal length, sensor size and aperture. The shorter distance, longer focal length, bigger sensor size, and bigger aperture will decrease the depth of field. So if the other three are constant, the closer you get in on the subject, the more background blur you get. If you change the focal length from 200 to 50mm, you have to get in really close to get the same shallow depth of field with the shorter lens. Here is a great simulator for dof: dofsimulator.net/en/

  • @PVPonTubeYou
    @PVPonTubeYou 9 лет назад +4

    This really is an excellent explanation of focal length. Very well done Mike, Natasha and assistant.

  • @petermoeller5901
    @petermoeller5901 5 лет назад

    Watched this video when it first came out, it just popped up on my side bar, so I watched it again. This video has not lost anything, good pace, good explanation and demonstration what focal lengths do. Good work Mike!

  • @johnblanke2653
    @johnblanke2653 4 года назад +1

    Now, this one brings on the nostalgia!! Not sure how many times I originally watched it, but it was a bunch. And the lock down has me going down Mike Brown memory lane via RUclips. This one was one of your best and really did a great job of demonstrating the effect that different focal lengths have on images.....as well as the concept of thinking of zooms as a collection of primes, rather than as a mere "framing tool." 👍👍👍

  • @rallbart
    @rallbart 9 лет назад +634

    Sucribed. Only to see Nathasha again...

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +203

      Thanks rallbart Tash is lovely... Hate to break your heart but she's all settled and believe it or not, a mother of 2 lovely daughters - MIKE :-)

    • @rallbart
      @rallbart 9 лет назад +34

      Mike Browne wow, this shows that she would be an amazing woman

    • @AdityaMahat
      @AdityaMahat 7 лет назад +21

      I seriously don't want to believe u!

    • @seamushowling572
      @seamushowling572 6 лет назад +3

      LOL

    • @tahaariaz
      @tahaariaz 6 лет назад +1

      Same dude.

  • @b991228
    @b991228 7 лет назад +41

    On vacation I went to the famous Grand Teton Mountain Moulton Barns, set my lens at what I thought was the prescribed wide angle setting, stood 10 feet from the barn and shot away. To my dismay my viewfinder presented to me possibly the worst rendition of that scene ever produced. Then an experienced photographer came to my aid. He showed me that if the photo is about the background and not the foreground I should ditch the wide angle setting and stand way back and frame up with a telephoto setting. To my amazement I discovered that there was a beautiful mountain that rose up from behind that barn. I can’t thank that photographer enough for the help he gave me on that day.

    • @billrosmus6734
      @billrosmus6734 5 лет назад

      This is a really great observation. Looking at it from the opposite side of doing portraits. Thanks.

    • @gaurav.anirbandutta
      @gaurav.anirbandutta 5 лет назад +1

      Lovely insight. Thanks for sharing

  • @ArnoldWatson
    @ArnoldWatson 10 лет назад +11

    This was an awesome demonstration on focal lengths and much appreciated indeed!

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад +1

      Thanks Arnold Watson Please help me out spreading the word by sharing it on forums, facebook etc... :-)

  • @TheToolsOfWizeChoice
    @TheToolsOfWizeChoice 5 лет назад +3

    Great Vid. I watched it a few years ago and came upon again. Still one of the best.

  • @25wasthespeedlimit40
    @25wasthespeedlimit40 5 лет назад +11

    I went straight out there but Natasha had already gone (7 & 1/2 years ago )
    Great video!

  • @MikeHermesPhotography
    @MikeHermesPhotography 7 лет назад +110

    Smart, clever and very useful. Great stuff :-) Subscribed

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад +2

      Thanks... MIKE

    • @cankavas
      @cankavas 5 лет назад

      Oh my god, that's my Maya tutor here.

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  11 лет назад

    Thank you - and you'll be very welcome

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

    Thank you. And all of us still have lots to learn no matter how long we've been doing it..

  • @scottwallace1
    @scottwallace1 11 лет назад +3

    Great video. Really gets you to think about it differently. Think about what look you want and then that dictates where you stand for any given focal length. Rather than the more amateur-ish stand in a spot and zoom until you get what you want in the frame. Brilliantly explained. Pretty model too :)

  • @Noahronquillo
    @Noahronquillo 8 лет назад +2

    Wow, Mike is a fantastic teacher

  • @julianboehm5918
    @julianboehm5918 9 лет назад +4

    You are truly the Bob Ross of photography. Keep your positive spirit.

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад +1

    It made sense. If you ONLY want crisp focus on one point and a blurry background and nothing else buy a longer lens. say 70-200mm, use it set long with a wide aperture (low F number). If you'd like to experiment more then I'd go for maybe a 18-70 as well. If you're just starting out and experimenting to see if you like it or not suggest you buy second hand to keep costs down. You can always upgrade later...

  • @pandoraefretum
    @pandoraefretum 7 лет назад +3

    Mike, I love all your clips and photography... great service you do to put up hints & tips .. thanks a bunch

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад +1

      You're welcome Roland Herrera. Please keep up the good work and help me make more by sharing them around... MIKE

    • @pandoraefretum
      @pandoraefretum 7 лет назад +1

      For sure !!

  • @AgnostosGnostos
    @AgnostosGnostos 9 лет назад +249

    Trash bin. The best place to leave an expensive lens.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +14

      I know I worried a few people with that Agnostos Gnostos But so long as the bin doesn't move it's every bit as sturdy as a table...

    • @MarlonKingShow
      @MarlonKingShow 5 лет назад

      and the bin wasnt straight, I saw the lens rocking... cringe!

    • @Idealisasi
      @Idealisasi 4 года назад

      I love that trash bin

    • @JalalKhan-br3ld
      @JalalKhan-br3ld 4 года назад

      Natasha cute lady ... her smile at 50 mm ... 🤣

    • @samy7342
      @samy7342 4 года назад

      @@MarlonKingShow Do you even know the meaning of that word?

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  11 лет назад

    Thank you Scott

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

    Pleasure Oli. It gives me a real buzz when someone gets a new idea for themselves. And well done for getting out there and trying it.

  • @aliruane
    @aliruane 10 лет назад +13

    Great informative video Mike. Really helpful thanks :-)

  • @fernandolavado
    @fernandolavado 9 лет назад +3

    thank you very much! this was perfectly explained thanks!!

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад

      My pleasure ***** Happy it helped. Please help me make more like it by sharing it on forums, social media etc

    • @fernandolavado
      @fernandolavado 9 лет назад +1

      done!

  • @olicorsedesigns
    @olicorsedesigns 10 лет назад +1

    Thank you for this. I was struggling to understand this concept but you presented it in a really clear, simple and straightforward way. I've just gone out and shot a bunch of pics at different lengths and now I totally get the concept. Thank you!

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

    Thanks Lance. Lucky you. Beautiful part of the world and I'm going to visit one day. I don't remember for sure but I think I set f5.6 throughout.

  • @cybernetix86
    @cybernetix86 7 лет назад +8

    Interesting video, you did not talk much about aperture of sensor size but it's a good video for a beginner. A 50mm f1.8 is pretty cheap and can do a very good job on a aps-c sensor to get a nice bokeh.

  • @lara8698
    @lara8698 9 лет назад +3

    Very helpful! Thank you so much!

  • @yasin6904
    @yasin6904 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for making this video. Superb clear and concise demonstration of the effect different focal lengths have on an image.

  • @jesterfun123
    @jesterfun123 6 лет назад +2

    Hi Mike,
    This was a fantastic tutorial. Very informative, straight to the point and very light hearted. You have a real knack for explaining things concisely in a way that anyone can understand. Definitely subscribed!

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  6 лет назад

      thank you Jester! please do share it too :) - Melissa pp Mike

  • @me0203
    @me0203 10 лет назад +6

    Excellent piece of advice

  • @EnzoGiannotti
    @EnzoGiannotti 10 лет назад +4

    I always come back to the source Mike! The most useful video about focal lenghts I've seen on youtube! (Y)

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

      Thank you Enzo Giannotti - have you seen my new 7 week downloadable course The 7 Building Blocks of Photography? It's the next step from my free stuff www.photographycourses.biz/7_building_blocks_of_photography.html

  • @FrantasticMakeup
    @FrantasticMakeup 4 года назад

    Thank you! I have been wracking my brain trying to understand Focal Length and in 1 video demonstration, you explained something that 20 different articles couldn't put into words for me to comprehend!

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  4 года назад +1

      You're very welcome! Delighted to have helped. If you're interested, I'm doing some live webinars on this very subject. Next dates will be released soon. If you'd like to join us there's a link below - and one to a weekly challenge and live feedback series we're doing called #photolockdown. Over 3000 people joined in last few weeks... MIKE 🙏🙂
      Webinars: www.photographycourses.biz/mike-browne-photography-webinars
      #photolockdown: www.photographycourses.biz/photography-locked-down

  • @agffth
    @agffth 8 лет назад

    The quality of this video is astonishing. (And this was in 2012) The content is excellent. I love that you ended the video with an immediate call to action to go out and try it right away. I'm subbing!

  • @raniadesign57
    @raniadesign57 7 лет назад +3

    I love this video so much , you can't imagine How that help me in my test

  • @djcalvin408
    @djcalvin408 7 лет назад +5

    this is great! never knew and thanks for the great explanation.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад

      Thanks Calvin Do - MIKE :-)

  • @iRabb
    @iRabb 10 лет назад

    One of the most practical and useful videos ever. If you don't learn something from this, well, I actually think it's because you don't want to learn what Mike is teaching. Look, you don't have to use this information, but it's the best demonstration of perspective I've seen.

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

    Thank you Piotr

  • @maureenkarugia9652
    @maureenkarugia9652 8 лет назад +47

    your a wonderful teacher

    • @TimStruckmeier
      @TimStruckmeier 7 лет назад +9

      +Maureen Karugia *you're* ;)

    • @gauravcheema
      @gauravcheema 6 лет назад +7

      Tim Struckmeier your a wonderful teacher too.

  • @Hitogata
    @Hitogata 10 лет назад +4

    This was really useful!! Thank you so much!!

  • @youpie24
    @youpie24 5 лет назад +1

    Natural presenter and teacher. Very good video!! Thanks!

  • @NewAstronomer
    @NewAstronomer 9 лет назад +1

    Brilliant. I'm a new photographer and this was an excellent exercise to learn about focal length and how it affects the composition. Thank you for making this video.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад

      thank you New Astronomer please help us create more free videos by sharing us to social media or photography forums :) - MELISSA ( for Mike )

  • @ivankindle3
    @ivankindle3 5 лет назад +7

    - Oh I'm a Nat photographer
    - National geographic!!!? Wow!
    - No, the model's name is Natasha, we call her Nat for short.
    - Oh!

  • @ryanmoore5237
    @ryanmoore5237 4 года назад +3

    At 1:15 when she walked into the full shot I almost lost it lmao. I thought this video must be from 2011-2013, cause let me tell you. I had an ex that wore that same outfit out one night sophomore year of college 😂

  • @Southfotos
    @Southfotos 10 лет назад

    I really appreciate all your hard work in RUclips, thank you mike!

  • @Otarian70
    @Otarian70 10 лет назад

    Hi Mike.. I have been doing a lot of Macro since getting my DSLR, and the end results have been pretty good (for a novice). Now Im starting with portrait photography and have been all over youtube looking for vid's that 'focus' on the 'focus' issues...your video is the first one I've found that actually makes sense...THANKS MATE

  • @matrixate
    @matrixate 5 лет назад +6

    This video actually confirmed me getting a 50mm.
    5:18 here's my personal bookmark.

  • @nonyabizwax5892
    @nonyabizwax5892 7 лет назад +3

    even dad can understand the direction that way. thanks

  • @famasG24eva
    @famasG24eva 11 лет назад

    Very nice and informative! Can say you're one of the few people I'm actually sure I'll subscribe to and watch for new video releases!

  • @leatherelf2078
    @leatherelf2078 5 лет назад

    Very practical advice and a good learning lesson for your camera and lens. Thank you for that thought of treating each focal length as a prime. Knew about moving myself but this was a nice perspctive to be given.

  • @JessePedyfoot
    @JessePedyfoot 8 лет назад +3

    I really appreciate this video. I have a Nikon D90 with a 55-200mm and u was wondering about the portrait type of shots. you have explained what I should do. I will do the exercise

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  8 лет назад

      Thanks +Jesse Pedyfoot go for it. And please share any of my vids you find helpful around - it helps me make more of them.. - MIKE

    • @JessePedyfoot
      @JessePedyfoot 8 лет назад +1

      +Mike Browne I will and thank you again.

  • @kenalvarado9530
    @kenalvarado9530 5 лет назад +3

    A teen from 2019 is waving.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  5 лет назад +1

      waving back! - Melissa pp Mike

  • @Johnnie007
    @Johnnie007 5 лет назад +1

    Best video I've seen on this. None of the other photographers I've watched have been able to explain it so well. Thanks.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  5 лет назад

      Hey thanks Johnnie... MIKE :-)

    • @highlandmediaalba699
      @highlandmediaalba699 5 лет назад

      I know it is a long video however I really like this video ruclips.net/video/hnMY1u7M90o/видео.html

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

    Thank you

  • @Passio7Jd
    @Passio7Jd 9 лет назад +18

    thanks mike, finally my wife will allow me to do portraits for her since she's looking better after i took this lesson, finally XDDD

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +2

      Way to go Yao Will Yehaa :-)

    • @dramamine755
      @dramamine755 5 лет назад +1

      Yao William why can someone who uses "XD" on the internet have a girl but not me

    • @justspacing9031
      @justspacing9031 5 лет назад +3

      @@dramamine755 He has a wife not a girl. Which is something you don't want son

  • @ricardodelrio69
    @ricardodelrio69 10 лет назад +3

    Great video...

  • @TonyisToking
    @TonyisToking 10 лет назад

    Such an important concept, great video!

  • @justdoit2521
    @justdoit2521 5 лет назад +5

    Well, I guess the shot at 10 mm was flattering in a different way...

  • @yan870126
    @yan870126 7 лет назад +3

    what bout the aperture? once my zoom lens increased the focal length the max f. will become more(smaller aperture) so how to get the bokeh effect with a higher f.?

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад +2

      Even if your lens stops down the aperture when zooming you'd have to use a very small aperture to loose all bokeh with a long lens John. So let's say your lens goes from f4 to f5.6 - the difference would me minimal when working at say 200mm or more - MIKE

  •  7 лет назад +3

    Servus mir gefällt das echt gut was du da machst. Mach genau so weiter! I like :) Daniel

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  7 лет назад

      Thanks Daniel - CHRISTINA :-)

  • @TheEulerID
    @TheEulerID 9 лет назад +8

    The perspective element of this is driven solely by the distance between the camera and the subject. You'd get precisely the same perspective by using the same focal length at all the distances and cropping the resultant picture to the same framing. Of course the big downside of this is that you will very rapidly get reduced resolution.
    So the lesson here is that what controls perspective is just that distance to the subject. The reason different focal lengths are used is simply to maximise the amount of sensor being used for your preferred FoV. If you want your main subject to look large compared to the surroundings, move close to it (or them). That way you get apparently enormous people and small mountains. However, if you want tiny people and large mountains, then move further away from the people.
    So think perspective first, and focal length second. The focal length is just an enabler to fill the sensor. It is not responsible for the perspective.

    • @petermoeller5901
      @petermoeller5901 8 лет назад +1

      +Steve Jones This cannot be said often enough. This slogan “use a long focal length to avoid perspective distortion” even works as a rule, but technically speaking, it is not correct.
      It is the distance sensor/subject that drives perspective distortion.
      The above slogan or rule works, because with the longer focal length you will move away from the subject.
      The other thing is that even with a shorter focal length, there are techniques to avoid distortion. Basically, be very careful to hold the camera horizontally and at the appropriate level… so you can get flattering portraits head & shoulder with a 35mm or 50mm lens… but with a 12mm a head & shoulders portrait avoiding distortion would be very difficult.

  • @SimMaster
    @SimMaster 8 лет назад +6

    "compression" is only caused by distance to the subject. It's not the focal length or zoom. It's just a property of perspective and geometry.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  8 лет назад +3

      You are of course correct, but that's a lot to take on board when you're someone who's learning. The effect is long lens makes you move back so the image looks the way it odes. Also you don't loose pixels that way. - MIKE

    • @SimMaster
      @SimMaster 8 лет назад +1

      Mike Browne
      Not really. It's something you should realize just by existing and moving around in reality. The apparent size of a distant object changes slower than the size of a closer object when you move towards or away from them.

    • @tmjcbs
      @tmjcbs 6 лет назад

      +Mike Browne
      If you think a full explanation is too hard to grasp, as your comment suggests, you should either not make this video or go the full length and explain it properly. I would rather name this video 'a demonstration of different focal lengths', because it isn't really an 'explanation'.

    • @DIGITALSWOON
      @DIGITALSWOON 5 лет назад +1

      by changing the lens, you need to change your perspective and your distance for the same subject. this is what he is demonstrating. and no, this is not so obvious because we of course can't change our eyes focal length; so different focal lengths essentially do change perspective, unless you're planning on just cropping your photos like he was explaining in his reply, but you'll lose resolution.

  • @qubafootbag
    @qubafootbag 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for the very informative video, I would do this exercise with Natasha with pleasure honestly

  • @roughlyEnforcing
    @roughlyEnforcing 9 лет назад +6

    love the neighbor watching

  • @AJAY3410
    @AJAY3410 6 лет назад +35

    1:09 😍😍😍

  • @Gio_EL
    @Gio_EL 6 лет назад +3

    Thanks alot! Such Great insight! This really cleared things up for me. My Friend and I are going to start a web series. So this was invaluable.
    Also, I have one totally unrelated question: What's the lavalier mic that you're using? I found it very clean and with little noise. What would you recommend as a lav mic? You see, I've always been using shotgun mics, and I never found the use of lavs.
    Thanks alot Friend!! (^^u)/

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  6 лет назад +1

      I use Sennheiser ew 112P-G4 radio mics Gio EL. Link below… MIKE
      www.mercury-av.com/sales/Sennheiser-EW112P-G4-GB-Wireless-ENG-Lapel-System.html?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIsvevjIDb2wIVQbTtCh09OgXpEAQYBSABEgJd9vD_BwE

    • @Gio_EL
      @Gio_EL 6 лет назад +2

      Mike Browne Thanks Friend! (^^u)/

  • @jr4chargers
    @jr4chargers 7 лет назад +28

    Right this minute? But, It's 11PM . :(

  • @candyboy5971
    @candyboy5971 5 лет назад +9

    50-70-85 best focal lengths for portraits

    • @photosbytim8019
      @photosbytim8019 5 лет назад

      Candy Boy I use aps-c cameras and I like 35-40-50-70 for portraits

    • @candyboy5971
      @candyboy5971 5 лет назад

      @@photosbytim8019 Aps-c makes the 40mm to a 60mm (40×1.5) so ya

    • @ahsanshaikh1635
      @ahsanshaikh1635 5 лет назад

      what about full frame with 50mm

  • @stompi3
    @stompi3 9 лет назад +17

    3:51 put lense cap back on!!!!!!!!!!

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  9 лет назад +3

      :-) Michael Morris - I never use lens caps because they get in the way when I'm in a hurry to capture a shot and I end up missing the moment. I keep the lens hood on and that stops stuff like greasy fingers touching the glass/

    • @stompi3
      @stompi3 9 лет назад +2

      Lol I'm so paranoid about anything touching the good stuff in my lenses. I always have my caps on. Good video though

    • @nuttynut242
      @nuttynut242 5 лет назад

      Lens cap are overrated

    • @KevinSmith-tq3gm
      @KevinSmith-tq3gm 5 лет назад +1

      Spell lens correctly!!!!!!!!!!

  • @heffelumpphotoco
    @heffelumpphotoco 7 лет назад +3

    Basically, the wider the focal length, the bigger the divide between subject and background. The narrower (telephoto) focal length, the closer the distance between subject and background.

    • @fightnight14
      @fightnight14 6 лет назад

      agreyknight
      You got it the other way around

  • @mutstahl
    @mutstahl 8 лет назад +5

    better: zoom move and shot

  • @FirearmTutorials
    @FirearmTutorials 10 лет назад +2

    This was really helpful. Thanks for sharing!

  • @SM_zzz
    @SM_zzz 5 лет назад

    This really helped me as a beginner. Thank you Mike, and your lovely assistant Nat!

  •  7 лет назад +90

    Move a little close Nat
    *Mike waks two step*
    Gets heart attack.

  • @MRSLAV
    @MRSLAV 6 лет назад +3

    What is Natasha's number?

    • @ESP1138
      @ESP1138 3 года назад

      Good question. I want to hire her.

  • @MikeBrowne
    @MikeBrowne  10 лет назад

    Thank you.

  • @earavichandran
    @earavichandran 4 года назад

    This is best video i ever seen. No other video explaining about how focal length affects perspective.
    Excellent video. Excellent explanation.

  • @nadine6214
    @nadine6214 6 лет назад +3

    6:03 vs 5:19 = expectation vs reality

  • @totalmentekemado
    @totalmentekemado 8 лет назад +237

    This is driving me crazy... am i the only one that hears "Over there Bitch" at 6:45?
    :-/

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  8 лет назад +56

      Made me laugh +TMK Santivanez it does sound a bit like that - MIKE :-)

    • @TheMehdieval
      @TheMehdieval 8 лет назад +80

      +TMK Santivanez
      over there a bit

    • @joepeffer5115
      @joepeffer5115 8 лет назад +7

      Lol I was just going to comment! I replayed like 3 times thinking wait what!?

    • @DatoAliffAlex
      @DatoAliffAlex 7 лет назад

      TMK Santivanez LMAOOO HAHA

    • @jillbrammer7391
      @jillbrammer7391 7 лет назад +20

      Ha. "Over there a bit" with an accent does make it sound a bit like that :)

  • @asteroidX
    @asteroidX 6 лет назад

    Man, you got a subscriber. One of the best video on photography I've ever watched.

    • @MikeBrowne
      @MikeBrowne  6 лет назад +1

      ROKIBUL thank you for subscribing!- Melissa pp Mike

  • @kunalgoel4371
    @kunalgoel4371 6 лет назад

    Amazing video.
    Focal lengths got me all worked up but now I understand it better than ever.

  • @3vimages471
    @3vimages471 8 лет назад +150

    Out of breath taking photos!

    • @marcel911
      @marcel911 6 лет назад +21

      Nat would get me out of breath too.

    • @Xiox321
      @Xiox321 5 лет назад +8

      Lots of talking, moving around, and some of that equipment can get really heavy, then you're also using energy by trying to keep yourself steady. Photography can be exhausting.

    • @whosjozikolnik
      @whosjozikolnik 5 лет назад

      Check Peter McKinnon

    • @AdamCJost
      @AdamCJost 4 года назад

      Im guessing Cigarettes