Leighgion
Bovine Overseer
I think being so easily distracted that a few quivery lines in the out of focus areas gets you is a form of disability.
I regard bokeh as simply one metric of technical refinement in a lens, nothing more or less. A good lens, more often than not, has good bokeh when opened up.
The thing is, most of the photos that us mortals take are actually rather mundane. In out time they have little to no social/historical relevance. In this setting, all the technicalities matter - since it pretty much is how we seperate a good/significant photo from a bad/insignificant one.
Not necessarily. Consider vanilla, the kind you put in cake batter. There is good vanilla and bad vanilla and OK vanilla, but you can also have MORE vanilla or LESS vanilla.
So a faster lens used wide-open necessarily produces a shallower depth-of-focus and the out-of-focus areas are more pronounced, but that's just MORE vanilla, not necessarily BETTER vanilla.
. . .
I suspect that some folks who are turned off by what they think of as examples of good bokeh have simply been given too much vanilla, not the right amount of good vanilla.
Exactly. Bokeh happens. I just consider it an artifact of whatever aperture i had to set the lens at to get the photo I wanted. If I have to shoot someone at 10 feet with my 70-200 2.8 at 200 and 2.8, the background is going to be nothing but blur. Who cares what it looks like? I'm not shooting backgrounds. I can shoot stuff with the 70-200 2.8 IS that I can't shoot with anything else. What it does to OOF areas is simply irrelevant.
No nickers in a twist here, but your comment sounds like an argument for the lowest common denominator to me - fish'n chips wins, close all the restaurants!
It should be self evident that I realise others DO find shots of coffee cups beside a newspaper at f 0.1 fascinating, but I am suggesting that horizons can be broader and ultimately even more rewarding. Often people progress themselves, unless stuck in a goldfish bowl in which the procession of coffee cup shots is endless.
Your comment is very anti-critique, in which case there is no real scope for opinion based feedback, self-critique and self-furtherance...because there is no, well, further. Where you are at is as good as anywhere else, so why bother?
Really, I understand what you are saying. But, if all you have is a 600mm mirror lens, and it takes it to get the photo, bokeh simply doesn't matter.
Seconded. In most good pictures it is at best very secondary, and it is often unnoticeable, which is as it should be. It's like the fashion designer who said that if a woman wore one of the dresses he had designed, and people said, "What a beautiful dress," he had failed, but if they said, "What a beautiful woman," he had succeeded.
If bokeh is one of the first things you notice, the chances are that either it's not a good picture, or you are pointlessly obsessed with it.
EDIT: Brilliant idea for a thread, by the way -- I wish I'd thought of it! -- and one of the few polls in which I take any interest whatsoever.
Cheers,
R.
where do you stand on bokeh?
necessary evil?
fool's quest?
i hate the f'ing word itself!!
bokeh smokeh...