jcb4718
Well-known
Sevo has a point. Aperture is a kind of geometrically defined quantity related, but not precisely related, to the light hitting the film plane...and certainly not precisely enough for the motion picture business -hence their use of t-stops to get reproducible exposures from scene-to-scene. As I said above, I found a big difference in bokeh at a given f-stop between my 50mm f1.8 and f1.4 lenses. This is due to some of the off-axis the light being absorbed by the 'walls' of the f1.8 lens and therefoire not reaching the film plane. As I said, this produces out-of-focus highlights that are not circular: they are flattened and symmetrical about the centre of the image ('swirley bokeh'). It also means that for the f1.8 lens less light is reaching the film plane at a given aperture than with the f1.4 lens, particularly towards the edge of the image (= vignetting). It's a complex business, I guess that's why the 'Director of Photography' is so important on a movie set!