BetterSense
Member
I'm wondering what it means to have shallow DOF after a certain point. What's the shallowest DOF you can get, possibly?
If you get a large format, with long lens, and use it at an absurdly fast aperture, can you have basically zero DOF, but still have at least ONE plane that is perfect focus, even if that plane is impractically thin? Or does it just fall apart and become unfocusable at a certain point?
Or does it happen that after a certain point, DOF diminishes to a certain depth, and then kind of stops there, no matter how much faster you make the aperture, the dof is just "max shallow" similar to how "infinity" is reached?
My speed graphic has a DOF chart on it, that reads "0" for close distances at large apertures. But what's that supposed to mean anyway? Does the lens not form an image? Of course it does, just at the circle of confusion chosen, the DOF is insignificant.
What are some camera/lens combinations that give extremely shallow DOF?
If you get a large format, with long lens, and use it at an absurdly fast aperture, can you have basically zero DOF, but still have at least ONE plane that is perfect focus, even if that plane is impractically thin? Or does it just fall apart and become unfocusable at a certain point?
Or does it happen that after a certain point, DOF diminishes to a certain depth, and then kind of stops there, no matter how much faster you make the aperture, the dof is just "max shallow" similar to how "infinity" is reached?
My speed graphic has a DOF chart on it, that reads "0" for close distances at large apertures. But what's that supposed to mean anyway? Does the lens not form an image? Of course it does, just at the circle of confusion chosen, the DOF is insignificant.
What are some camera/lens combinations that give extremely shallow DOF?