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Circle of confusion

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Photoemulator

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I was aware of the idea of an image circle of lens and how they cover the format of desire. But the Stroebel book “View Camera Technique” 5th edition, has this (new to me) idea of “circle of good definition” which is not the same circle of coverage because it is likely smaller than coverage. Now, that makes sense. But I never considered it before it was mentioned. But what is meant by the second image, “substituting a longer focal length of conventional design”?
 

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I was aware of the idea of an image circle of lens and how they cover the format of desire. But the Stroebel book “View Camera Technique” 5th edition, has this (new to me) idea of “circle of good definition” which is not the same circle of coverage because it is likely smaller than coverage. Now, that makes sense. But I never considered it before it was mentioned. But what is meant by the second image, “substituting a longer focal length of conventional design”?

He means substituting a longer focal length lens that is not a telephoto design.
 
Generally speaking, the longer the FL of the lens, the larger both the Circle of Good Definition, and the 'Circle of Illumination' both get.

What is not apparent is what is a lens of 'conventional design' vs. a lens of 'unconventional' design! I have Stroebel's book, and the 'unconventional' does not seem to be given a definition.

What is also not apparent is if the 'Image Circle' commonly defined in lens specs is what Stroebel calls the 'Circle of Good Definition' or the 'Circle of Illumination'.

...a bit of 'literary license'?!

I found this definition for 'Image Circle': "An image circle is the circular, light-projected area a lens creates on an image plane (sensor or film). It defines the maximum area of acceptable image quality, usually covering the diagonal of the sensor to prevent dark, vignetted corners. And so it seems that the common 'Image Circle' is Stroebel's 'Circle of Good Definition'
 
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I think it refers to a "standard" lens design, not retro focus or telephoto, etc.

In other words, the focal length is indeed the distance from the lens to the film plane when focused, not closer or farther.
 
Generally speaking, the longer the FL of the lens, the larger both the Circle of Good Definition, and the 'Circle of Illumination' both get.

What is not apparent is what is a lens of 'conventional design' vs. a lens of 'unconventional' design! I have Stroebel's book, and the 'unconventional' does not seem to be given a definition.

What is also not apparent is if the 'Image Circle' commonly defined in lens specs is what Stroebel calls the 'Circle of Good Definition' or the 'Circle of Illumination'.

...a bit of 'literary license'?!

I found this definition for 'Image Circle': "An image circle is the circular, light-projected area a lens creates on an image plane (sensor or film). It defines the maximum area of acceptable image quality, usually covering the diagonal of the sensor to prevent dark, vignetted corners. And so it seems that the common 'Image Circle' is Stroebel's 'Circle of Good Definition'

The text for the illustration does give an explanation that by inference you can determine that a conventional lens is neither a wide angle nor a telephoto design. This is from the 3rd edition, so when it says Figure 99 it is the same figure as 3-23 above).

Scan_20260424.jpg
 
Stroebel seems to be referring to non-wide angle or telephoto lens designs when he uses the term "conventional." That would include things like Plasmats and Tessars, et al.

But, let's clear up the confusion about "circles of this and that." The "circle of good definition" is the part of the image circle that is free of optical aberrations and distortions from the lens design. The entire image circle being the "circle of illumination". For many lenses, the extreme outer parts of the projected image circle are not sharp. Older Tessars nave this characteristic. Many more modern lenses, like newer Plasmats, have mechanical vignetting built in to eliminate the outer edge of the possible image circle and restrict it to just the "good definition" part. FWIW, I have to be careful with my older Tessars and Ektars to make sure I don't place objects that need good definition at the edge of the circle of illumination. Open sky is fine though.

The "circle of confusion" is something else entirely. When a point is focused on the film, it is rendered close enough to a point that we see it as sharp. When that point is gradually moved out of sharp focus, that point becomes larger. It moves one way or other along the projected cone of light coming from the lens, so it is really a perpendicular conical section, i.e., a circle (barring aberrations from the lens). If that circle stays small enough that we can't distinguish it from the perfectly focused point, then we still see it as sharp. But, when it gets large enough, we begin to see softness, or perceive it as out of focus. It is this growing circle that is the "circle of confusion" and it's size on the film and in the final print determine what is perceived as sharp or unsharp.

Best,

Doremus
 
"Circle of confusion" is a confusing concept based upon presumptions about image magnification and viewing distance. It might make sense in pictures reproduced in books or magazines meant for typical reading distance. Otherwise, it's just another Alice in Wonderland rabbit hole leading to endless nitpicky controversy.

With old time lenses, which were not yet fully corrected for different wavelengths, you might get a peripheral ghost image fringing over a sharper wavelength impression for which the lens is better corrected. Or that might be due to spherical aberration. Some images might benefit from that kind of old-timey look, but not others. Sometimes portrait pros want a less harsh look with more "rounded edges" - hence certain modern lenses factor that into their design. But that should not be confused with "soft focus" lenses or filters.
 
The "circle of confusion" is a personal choice because it depends on different factors, as Drew mentioned. Likewise, "image circle", "circle of illumination" and "circle of good definition" are too. The manufacturers list them according to their preferences. Light fall-off starts at one degree away from the axis. At what point does it make a difference? You decide. I bet it's not the same as the lens maker.
 
Graphics reproduction standards for lenses are much stricter. In those cases, the rated area of coverage for a lens is apt to be rated much more conservatively than for a general photography. Same with the definition of "apo", which was much stricter for the color printing trade (pre-scanning days) than for general camera lens marketing purposes.
 
When does a lens become an achromat becomes a apochromat.

When does a lens become a close-up becomes a macro becomes a micro.

When does a lens become a coated lens becomes a multi-coated lens.

There are no legal definitions.
 
Oh, there were once patent distinctions behind the terminology. But over time some of that morphed into marketing jargon.
 
By the way, what CoC size "should" be used?

That's the million dollar question, and why it's up to you. The smaller you make it, the less DOF you have, and the larger you make it, the more DOF you have. But not really. The DOF is always the same. It's merely what you consider IN focus or OUT of focus. And that depends on a lot of things. The farther away you are from a print, the more in focus it looks. It also depends on how much you enlarge the image. The bigger the print, the more out of focus it will appear -- if you stand at the same distance. And since a 35mm negative is enlarged much more than a 4x5" negative to make the same sized print, the CoC needs to be smaller for the smaller negative to compensate.
 
This DOF app allows you to set the Circle of Confusion size to determine DOF if you don;t like the lens manufacturer's CoC size selection. Click on Advanced Options.

By the way, what CoC size "should" be used?

https://www.pointsinfocus.com/tools/depth-of-field-and-equivalent-lens-calculator/#{%22c%22:[{%22f%22:13,%22av%22:%2216%22,%22fl%22:150,%22d%22:7498,%22cm%22:%220%22,%22sf%22:%221%22}],%22m%22:0}
xkaes summarized the nature of the issue. For the solution...

The CofC calculator available by Cambridge Color permits you to choose 'standard manufacturer' value (which is not as good as what an optometrist aims to accomplish in correcting vision) vs choosing 20/20 vision standard, and permits you to specify both the print size and the print viewing distant, to meet your expectations, as well as specifying shooting format.

 
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