How to take SHARPER Photos!
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- Опубликовано: 23 сен 2021
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Somewhere between the minimum and maximum setting LOL
generally means the middle aperture. On my main 50mm prime that'd be f/5.6 but on my 28mm wide angle it'd be f/8.
@@xander1052 yeah but the way he said it made it sound differently 😂 how old are you? Between born and dead 😂 ppl like us are thinking in technical terms so somewhere between min and max is not technical (as opposed to saying HALFway between min and max - which indicates 50%)
@@the_homie_alfred he's talking to a different audience than you. You obviously are already familiar with cameras, this video is targeted towards people who don't know what they're doing. in the next sentence he clarified it anyway, saying it's a few stops up from lowest setting. Regardless, what he said makes sense, because people do shoot on the lowest setting
" usually few stop up from the lowest setting "
If only wait a few seconds more 😅
Thats the most vague answer 😂
Between min and max…
Thanks bro 😂
You can’t have a complete answer… if you go sharper the image goes darker, and if you want more light is would have worse quality.
@@giancarloarrobarodriguez5291 gotcha thanks for the info
i was just playin
@@giancarloarrobarodriguez5291 True, but he could have spent 15 more seconds explaining just that. Could've given rule of thumb apertures for different typical scenarios.
For me, I found it to be F/ 2.8 for portraits, F/ 4-5.6 for couples and F/ 8 for large groups
I appreciate this 🙏
What do you do when the light conditions are no tia good? I have flash godox v1s and can’t seem to light correctly …
That literally tell you nothing unless you know the focal length. I never go past f/4 for group photos and usually stay around 1.2 - 2.8
@@resiyun that would make since unless you have everyone standing on the same focal plane which can be very difficult in such a shallow depth of field. At focal length like F1.2 and 2.8 can be great to isolate subjects but only 1-2 at a time. For bigger groups I recommend F4 minimum to ensure everyone is in focus. Give it a try next time you are photographing larger groups
@@Gzus_102 I believe you're new to photography as you're confusing f/ with focal length. Ive shot groups of over 100 persons at f/2, all in sharp focus. DOF is not controlled by JUST f/, its a mix of f/, focal legth, subject distance, background distance and sensor size. all of these go into factoring how much is in focus.
The best way to get sharper images is to increase your shutter speed. Probably the most common mistake new photographers make is too slow a shutter speed for the subject and they get motion blur. This sometimes happens because they stopped the lens down, at the expense of shutter speed, in a situation where there wasn't enough light. Both are important, but I guarantee you, you will get more blurry images due to lack of shutter speed than from a wide open lens, especially with quality lenses from the major camera makers.
exactly....aperture settings have nothing to do with it.
Just wanted to say love your work man, learnt A LOT about photography from ur videos
That's actually a good analogy
Astrophotography has been my first proper attempt at any type of photography, so it's pretty interesting to see how much astrophotography and other types of photography have in common, and what they differ in.
What a perfect way to explain aperture it does’t waist your time and I think could really get some people to understand the concept so much faster than reading a text book. You really are the short form king. So much value packed into little nuggets and if I need more Ill watch the long form content.
What's your favorite aperture to shoot at?
2.0 -8
5.5-11
1.8 - 9.0
usually around f/4 on my primes, closer to f/8 on my bigger 70-210mm, though I tend to end up shooting closer to f/2.8 as I go handheld and don't have much wriggleroom to up my ISO given I'm shooting film.
F1.8 or wide open for portraits and about F4 for everything else. Landscapes are a thing I don’t do often but when I do I put it at F11 or so depending on my exposure
i usually do F4 for normal stuff and F8 for backround clarity. when panning i like to use F8
Underated
f/5.6 is always the sharpest on every lens and every camera.
Not necessarily, mainly as not every lens can reach an F stop as fast as 5.6 (i've got a f6.3 and my dad used to have an f/8 lens)
No, my lens is sharpest at f1.2
Yeah, works a charm on my 800 f11
@@franticpudding9018 original comment isn’t true but neither is this, no 1.2 lens is sharpest wide open
@@Mojofilter111is3 Tell that to my Viltrox 75mm f1.2. Look at the MTF's, centre is sharpest at 1.2.
Nice work
Nice man
Anthony without blue accent light looks cinematic
the best way to take sharper images is JUST BE GOOD
F7.1 to F11 is a good place to start
How do u only have 8 comments?!?!?
Well i love your videos and you are helping me, a 12 year old hobby "phtografer" out alot. Thx
Same😅
ILY Anthony
the sweet spot for the lens. if you know the sweet spot for the length zoom. f stop 2 stop faster than 6. shutter speed if to slow make blurry photo..
The better tip, IMO, is to use a tripod or monopod and failing those two, use a higher ISO to permit a faster shutter speed. Way more photos are rendered less than sharp due to hand movement than aperture choice. As well, using a high f stop introduces other problems that degrade lens performance. Most zooms perform their best at f8 or so. This video might encourage usage of f22 which should be reserved for true macro work, if at all.
If u have cheap lens it is better to use a tripod set the shutter speed to 11/80 and get more light then set aperture f4.5 or f5.6 to f8 the iso 100 to 200 to get everything in focus but if just bought lens it has f2.8 the sweet spot is f4 to 5.6 u can hand hold your camera because u have faster shutter speed
You should make a video of trying film photography
My dry plate camera has the aperture of F128😂
I should send this to my ex-boss. He would shoop wide open with a dslr and complain about the image NOT being in focus
Thx❤
Now 'splain diffraction - I know it happens at higher f stops, but I'd like to know what it does to the image and why it happens.
What would be the best for nature/wildlife and sports?
which one is best to get everything clear and sharp in the image?
You expect me to believe that the perfect setting is somewhere between the minimum and maximum values? Good luck finding it there! 😂
I have a d90 but i can't change it its a 15 years old camera and i have a 18mm-205mm
When you have nothing meaningful to say but your mouth keep rolling like camera on burst mode . MUGU
f/2.8 amazing for portrait
For 90mm sony, what is the best aputure?
gonna need more information than just focal length. it's generally right in the middle between the widest aperture you can set the lens to and the narrowest (based no. stops given that f number is exponential)
Does this still apply at night?
It's usually 4-5.6
My minimum is 1/4 but they still aren’t as sharp as I want. Suggestions? Canon Rebel T7 50mm
sharpness comes from your shutter speed. Aperture settings have nothing to do with it.
Why the loud music please
The song on headphones is @.@
f5. 6
FIRST. ♥
Just increase the sharpness
My dry plate camera has the aperture of F128😂