aperturemind
Newbie
Wow, thanks for all the responses — I didn’t expect this thread to get this much activity! Really appreciate hearing everyone’s perspective.
It’s interesting to see how many of you treat bokeh as a tool or a consequence rather than the main point. A lot of what’s being said about context, composition, and intention resonates with me. Makes me realize how often I see blur treated like it’s the whole show online, when in reality it’s just one element in the story.
I think what’s stuck with me from all this is that wide apertures and shallow depth of field aren’t inherently “good” or “bad” — it’s all about how they serve the image.
Feels like I’m rethinking how I approach wide-open shots, not just for effect, but for how they help tell the story I’m trying to capture.
What about bokeh as cultural phenomenon? I'm now noticing more youtube videos (basically podcasts) where only the host's face is in focus, the background blurred. But is bokeh on a downward trend with still photography? This thread is 19 years old now, but there has been a year and a half gap since the last post...
It’s interesting to see how many of you treat bokeh as a tool or a consequence rather than the main point. A lot of what’s being said about context, composition, and intention resonates with me. Makes me realize how often I see blur treated like it’s the whole show online, when in reality it’s just one element in the story.
I think what’s stuck with me from all this is that wide apertures and shallow depth of field aren’t inherently “good” or “bad” — it’s all about how they serve the image.
Feels like I’m rethinking how I approach wide-open shots, not just for effect, but for how they help tell the story I’m trying to capture.
What about bokeh as cultural phenomenon? I'm now noticing more youtube videos (basically podcasts) where only the host's face is in focus, the background blurred. But is bokeh on a downward trend with still photography? This thread is 19 years old now, but there has been a year and a half gap since the last post...
Don't blame it on me, blame it on John, this thread was his idea 🙂
Quality of bokeh is clearly subjective - heck, even my perception has changed.
I used to search for "donuts" and "footballs" in the background of a shallow
DOF picture.
These days, I care less about that, and look at the 3d rendering that I feel
a lens provides.
So, please post example pictures, of what you think is good and bad bokeh,
which lens at which aperture you used, and why you like/dislike the lens'
OOF performance.
I'll start (the pic that triggered this)...
Quality of bokeh is clearly subjective - heck, even my perception has changed.
I used to search for "donuts" and "footballs" in the background of a shallow
DOF picture.
These days, I care less about that, and look at the 3d rendering that I feel
a lens provides.
So, please post example pictures, of what you think is good and bad bokeh,
which lens at which aperture you used, and why you like/dislike the lens'
OOF performance.
I'll start (the pic that triggered this)...
- ferider
- Replies: 1,980
- Forum: Optics Theory -


