From a wander in a local woodland yesterday morning. I really liked the light which was coming through between two distant trees and had to shoot with the lens wide open at f/2.8, as the background bokeh gets smaller, the smaller the aperture you use.
Brilliant shot. Was it hand held, or were you steadying on the ground?
Using my phone, if you zoom right in the sharpest area is the right side curled part of the 2nd bud up, everything else is just starting to soften.
You still have lots of latitude to use a smaller apature to increase DOF. For me it needs that extra half inch. I think then it will have e that 3D look that makes it pop.
Brilliant shot. Was it hand held, or were you steadying on the ground?
Using my phone, if you zoom right in the sharpest area is the right side curled part of the 2nd bud up, everything else is just starting to soften.
You still have lots of latitude to use a smaller apature to increase DOF. For me it needs that extra half inch. I think then it will have e that 3D look that makes it pop.
Thanks very much Greg, it was on a tripod low to the ground.
If I closed the aperture down the bright area behind the bluebell would decrease in size - bokeh size is determined by aperture size and distance between subject and background.
The only way around it would be to focus stack, however I didn’t want everything to be sharp and am happy with the shallow depth of field.
Thanks very much Greg, it was on a tripod low to the ground.
If I closed the aperture down the bright area behind the bluebell would decrease in size - bokeh size is determined by aperture size and distance between subject and background.
The only way around it would be to focus stack, however I didn’t want everything to be sharp and am happy with the shallow depth of field.
That's beautiful! I love that Bokeh you achieved, and I can understand why you did what you did. It's always fun to figure out what to have in focus and what not to when it comes to macro.