goamules
Well-known
Optics (lens designs and glass) can only represent what they are seeing. There is no "magic", and when someone above said "sometimes xyz lens will do it, sometimes not" it's pointing to the truth. That a look comes not from a lens make or design as much as about composition, lighting, and the attributes of a lens including it's:
1. Speed
2. Focal Length (wide, normal, or narrow for format)
3. Optical aberrations
The first two will create the same depth of field for any lens that is the same focal length and aperture. A 50/1.4 Canon LTM will be the same as a 50/1.4 Nikkon LTM. The last is what causes a certain "bokeh" like swirl (coma) or disk out of focus highlights versus donut rings. Or a sharp across the frame image, versus a "soft" image in those two examples.
The so called "3D look" is a totally subjective thing, that really isn't a thing at all. They are looking at a photo with either a short depth of field, focused on a near or mid object, or are looking at a very wide angle shot, with separated objects near and far, in a lot of blank space. Period....that's it.
A look that accentuates what our eyes naturally see, is what makes things stand out in space. With our eyes, only the object we focus on is in focus, things closer and further are out of focus. Changing that AMOUNT of out of focus is what optics can do (that our eyes cannot), depending on the lens aperture and focal length for what distance you are shooting. A 75mm puts things out of focus easier than a 24mm lens. It looks more "3D" to some. In Large Format, photographers play with movements to radically adjust the out of focus areas sometimes. And some call the look "rounded" or "3D."
To me, this looks kind of 3D. But does it to you?

1. Speed
2. Focal Length (wide, normal, or narrow for format)
3. Optical aberrations
The first two will create the same depth of field for any lens that is the same focal length and aperture. A 50/1.4 Canon LTM will be the same as a 50/1.4 Nikkon LTM. The last is what causes a certain "bokeh" like swirl (coma) or disk out of focus highlights versus donut rings. Or a sharp across the frame image, versus a "soft" image in those two examples.
The so called "3D look" is a totally subjective thing, that really isn't a thing at all. They are looking at a photo with either a short depth of field, focused on a near or mid object, or are looking at a very wide angle shot, with separated objects near and far, in a lot of blank space. Period....that's it.
A look that accentuates what our eyes naturally see, is what makes things stand out in space. With our eyes, only the object we focus on is in focus, things closer and further are out of focus. Changing that AMOUNT of out of focus is what optics can do (that our eyes cannot), depending on the lens aperture and focal length for what distance you are shooting. A 75mm puts things out of focus easier than a 24mm lens. It looks more "3D" to some. In Large Format, photographers play with movements to radically adjust the out of focus areas sometimes. And some call the look "rounded" or "3D."
To me, this looks kind of 3D. But does it to you?


