OK, I understand: it can be difficult and also time consuming making DoF calculations when we are out having fun shooting.
Let me outline what I do.
I don’t often make DoF Calculations using a DoF Calculator: but that is what ‘experience’ is all about. When I began Photography I did use a DoF Calculator more often. All I had then was a Cardboard Dial DoF Calculator and also the DoF formulae to work out the DoF with paper and pen: but today we have computer applications which are very handy to use.
I use a free downloadable software, known as: “FCalc”. I usually carry a small notebook computer in my camera bag and it has that program on it.
Also I still have my Cardboard Dial DoF Calculator (actually I have two of them). One is in my Kodak Professional Handbook and I usually carry that handbook with me as it has a Standard Grey Card and also a Standard Colour Patch Chart in it too.
I am not saying that I use all this gear each time I go out with my camera bag: I am saying that I have all this gear to use when I need to use it. Also I am not saying you (or anyone) need to get all this gear.
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Simply speaking we can separate Photography into three main types:
> Landscapes
> Portraits
> Macro & Close-up.
Accurate DoF Calculations are not really all that necessary for most shooting scenarios. So I suggest that you do not get too concerned about needing to make a calculation for every photo that you take.
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LANDSCAPES:
Now let’s talk about shooting only Landscape Scenes. You will read about focussing at the “Hyperfocal Distance” to attain the maximum Depth of Field – and that is good to know. You’ll also read about “Diffraction when using small apertures” and that is good to know too.
But for most Landscape Scenes, focusing at or just before infinity and using and aperture F/8 to F/16 will allow for most circumstances really nice picture with adequate DoF: rather than DoF it usually is far more important to see and think about
:
> the LIGHT
> the FRAMING and COMPOSITION
> the SHUTTER SPEED
> the STABILITY of the Camera and Lens
So, for most landscape scenes, I don’t use the ‘⅓ - ⅔ Rule of Thumb’ – I just focus at or just before infinity and concentrate more on those other factors I have listed.
Obviously, for Landscape Scene where we want something in the Foreground to be in acceptable focus and we want the Horizon to also to be in acceptable focus we need to have some knowledge about DoF. For example, the shot of the man and the rainbow above.
For that particular shot I estimated the distance from the man to me and then I knew (simply from experience) that if I used F/11~F/16 and focussed on the man, then the horizon would be in sharp enough focus for the shot.
If I did not have that experience and knowledge:
- I could have opened up my computer notebook or my cardboard dial calculator and made a calculation to confirm the DoF.
- Also (and more importantly) I could have just used the smallest aperture available on my lens (F/32) and taken two shots - one focussing on the man and one focussed at infinity and hoped for the best. At least one of those would have the man in sharp focus and in reality, a slightly out of focus rainbow would not be the end of my Photographic life . . . It was more important for me to make the photograph before the rainbow disappeared or the man moved.
If you have more time and you are setting up a tripod for a particular Landscape Shot and there is a particular foreground object that you want in focus, then certainly whip out a DoF calculator if you need to and plan the shot carefully . . . but you will still have to wait for the light to be right and you might take a few shots before you are satisfied you have the best light.
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PORTRAITS:
When we make Portraits we are usually shooting at a restricted range of distances – from about 3 ft (1 metre) to about 60ft (20 metres)
The DEPTH OF FIELD for any APERTURE is directly related the FRAMING of any Portrait for any one camera FORMAT – this is the Axiom of Depth of Field.
As an example what this means is, if you frame me in your viewfinder so that my belt buckle to my head fills the frame, it doesn’t matter what lens you use, provided you use the same camera format and the same aperture, for all practical purposes the DoF will remain the same.
So I have learnt the DoF for each of these three main shots; each for three apertures (F/2.8; F/5.6; F/11); for both framing in Vertical and Horizontal Camera Orientations and that is sufficient for mostly all of my Portraiture Photography.
If you want to do this then I suggest you make two cheat sheets for the 18 Depths of Fields that you need to memorize - make one for Vertical Camera Orientation and one for Horizontal Camera Orientation.
However, even with a lot of experience under my belt, where I am very careful is for GROUP PORTRAITURE, when for some reason I need to use a larger aperture and I do not KNOW FOR CERTAIN if I am safe to use that larger aperture - I will indeed check the DoF calculator and also use a tape measure to confirm the Subject Distance.
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MACRO and CLOSE UPS
Is an area that I don’t often go to and is where getting enough DoF is sometimes a real pain for most Photographers; I don’t think that many Macro workers actually use any DoF calculations, but they use other means like focus stacking and seem to use very small apertures most of the time.
WW