Depth of Field
Depth of Field
Depth of Field
What is depth of field? Understanding depth of field is one of the first big hurdles in photography. Knowing
how your aperture, focal length and focusing work together to affect depth of field and control what
appears sharp in your photos will give you incredible confidence as a photographer.
In this quick tutorial we answer some of the common questions people have about depth of field and show
you a few tricks for knowing how to control it.
A camera can only focus its lens at a single point, but there will be an area that stretches in front of and
behind this focus point that still appears sharp.
This zone is known as the depth of field. It’s not a fixed distance, it changes in size and can be described as
either ‘shallow’ (where only a narrow zone appears sharp) or deep (where more of the picture appears
sharp).
Why do I need to know about it?
Because depth of field has an impact on both the aesthetic and technical quality of a picture. Sometimes
you’ll want to use an extensive depth of field in order to keep everything sharp.
A classic example is when you’re photographing a landscape, where generally the most desirable outcome
is to capture detail from the foreground to the horizon.
Other times, a shallow depth of field will be preferable. It enables you to blur background and foreground
details, causing distractions to melt away and allowing you to direct viewers to the focal point in a picture.
Many digital cameras come with a Depth of Field Preview button near the lens mount (see Page 3 on how
to use this!), or enable you to assign the same function to one of the other buttons. However, this doesn’t
have any effect on the depth of field.
The image you normally see through the viewfinder or on the Live View screen is displayed at the lens’s
maximum, or widest, aperture; the aperture you dial in on the camera body will only be set when you take
a picture.
However, pressing the Depth of Field Preview button allows you to view the scene at the working aperture,
so that you can see what areas will appear sharp.
There’s a range of ways to control the depth of field – the choice of aperture, focus distance and the type
of camera. In a nutshell, wider apertures and closer focusing distances lead to a shallower depth of field.
f/2.8
Wide or large apertures correspond with the small f-stop numbers available on your camera. So an
aperture of f/2.8 is wide, while an aperture of f/22 is small.
Again, focusing distance plays a part on the overall effect, with wide apertures offering considerably more
depth of field when focused on a subject far away than they do when focused on a subject that’s close to
the lens.
However, changing the focusing distance is often the least convenient way to control depth of field – it’s
much easier to simply select an alternative aperture setting.
The only thing you need to be aware of is that shifting from a large aperture to a small one can lead to
blurred photos.
They can do, but the choice of aperture has to be balanced with the shutter speed and ISO in order to
maintain a consistent exposure.
Larger apertures let in more light, so faster shutter speeds can be used to freeze movement. Switch to a
smaller aperture, and the amount of light passing through the lens is reduced.
Consequently, the shutter speed has to become slower, increasing the risk of camera shake and subject
movement. To get round this, you could increase the ISO (What is ISO? Click here!). This allows you to use
smaller apertures to increase the depth of field and use faster shutter speeds.
It’s the size of the imaging sensor inside the camera that makes the difference. The larger the sensor, the
shallower the depth of field will be at a given aperture.
This is because you’ll need to use a longer focal length or be physically closer to a subject in order to
achieve the same image size as you get using a camera with a smaller sensor – and remember the effect
that focusing closer has on depth of field.
This is why a full-frame camera produces a much shallower depth of field than an APS-C SLR or compact
system camera (CSC) at equivalent focal lengths and apertures.
The focal length of the lens does appear to have a significant impact on depth of field, with longer lenses
producing much more blur. A 200mm lens focused at 12ft will have a wafer-thin depth of field compared
to a 20mm lens focused at 12ft.
However, if the subject occupies the same proportion of the frame, the depth of field (the area that
appears sharp) is essentially the same whether you’re shooting with a wide-angle lens or a telephoto!
You would, of course, have to move closer with a wide lens or further away with a telephoto lens to
maintain the same subject size.
The reason longer lenses appear to produce a shallower depth of field is thanks to their narrow angle of
view: compared to a wide lens, a telephoto will fill the frame with a much smaller area of background, so
any blur appears magnified too. Use this characteristic to add a professional sheen to your portraits.