Bokeh
I recently took a photo for an assignment titled Bokeh and the below photo was my entry. Now while I accept it isn't that sharp an image given the Canon 18-55 kit lens I was using I was intrigued by a comment made by somebody and wondered if it is correct or whether in fact I need not take any notice.
The comment was that the bokeh was "too sharp" which interested me given that the depth of field was quite tight, especially in a flower garden. I'd be interested in what others thought.
The comment was that the bokeh was "too sharp" which interested me given that the depth of field was quite tight, especially in a flower garden. I'd be interested in what others thought.
Canon - Manfrotto - Pocketwizard - Sekonic - Westcott - Hoya - Singh Ray
http://chrismckayphotography.com
http://chrismckayphotography.com
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I find the bokeh to be to sharp ...
Mark Jones
http://photoblog.tejanoscatfish.com/
http://photography.tejanoscatfish.com/
Andy has a great thread about bokeh here
The term Bokeh, refers to the aesthetic pleasing out of focus areas of an image. Webster's dictionary defines bokeh as "a Japanese term for the subjective aesthetic quality of out-of-focus areas of a photographic image"
Wikipedia has a longer article here
Bokeh refers to the dreamy, creamy, out of focus areas of an image, with a lack of sharp, discrete points of light, and with the blur circles of lights smooth, round rings, rather than polygons which can be seen with lenses with fewer numbers of iris blades used at less than their maximum aperture.
I am not sure, myself, what "sharp" means in the context of your image. You do not have a really out of focus image, so the bokeh still shows out of focus flowers and stalks, not a totally out of focus image with no discrete details. But the areas that are out of focus are not harshly displayed either.
A quick search on dgrin about bokeh finds the following threads, as well as Andy's that I linked up above.
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=1054
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=27887
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
http://chrismckayphotography.com
http://www.rickdenney.com/bokeh_test.htm
And there is a surprise lens in the group.
http://joves.smugmug.com/
While it's true that to some extent, bokeh is subjective, after a careful reading of the "Bokeh Test" reference, I thought I could readily discern truly good from truly bad bokeh. In fact I thought I could tell the best lens from the one that basically came second - when it was presented to me.:D
I thought some of the other lenses completely fell apart under some circumstances, which to me wasn't completely subjective.
EDIT: As for the OP's image, I would say the bokeh wasn't bad, but fair. It didn't "jangle" my eyes as some of the Bokeh Test images did.
While I agree with the others 'sharp' may not be the best descriptor, I'm not sure what you mean by the above statement.
Could you please clarify?
-Fleetwood Mac