Why We Shoot "Wide Open"

Why We Shoot "Wide Open"

Bill & Eric Photography

3 года назад

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@robo2606
@robo2606 - 04.04.2021 15:41

It all depends on the photography you do. Landscape and architecture is nearly never shot at full open. Then we want a great depth of field.

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@davidtrachtenberg7095
@davidtrachtenberg7095 - 04.04.2021 16:08

I have a sigma 30mm 1.4 for my m50. What ND filter would you recommend?

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@firemannss
@firemannss - 04.04.2021 17:17

Great question and great answer! Softness @ wide open and diffraction stopped all the way down, it's physics of a lens at the extremes. The wide open = more Bokeh, and the softness is mostly hidden. (unless you're looking at light points as bokeh and you'll see the shape change as you go toward the edges. Look at a lens tested for astro and the softness of stars at the edges as an example) Bill stated it perfectly that you're wide open for a reason...separation. Want more sharpness, then you pay for it. Or get a high MP sensor and crop the edge softness out.

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@theflyest203
@theflyest203 - 04.04.2021 17:38

Love the shirt!! Where did you get it?

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@lovemycity420
@lovemycity420 - 04.04.2021 18:18

Great video

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@BlueLion364
@BlueLion364 - 04.04.2021 18:49

Great points Bill. I always shake my head a little when they gig a lens for being slightly out of focus in the corners. When do you ever put the subject of your picture in the corner. "No one puts Baby in the corner!" 😊 The corners are usually in your periphery which you can't focus well anyway. However, you did bring up the great point of architectural photography. I hadn't thought of that. Also, your camper has the nicest living room I've ever seen.

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@1noyk
@1noyk - 04.04.2021 20:52

Great points, terrific delivery!

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@grat2010
@grat2010 - 04.04.2021 21:49

Good question and thanks for such a thorough answer.

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@joes2828
@joes2828 - 04.04.2021 22:35

Simple. If I’m spending $1500 on a 1.2 or 1.4 lens, doesn’t make sense to constantly shoot at f4. Best believe I’m gonna be shooting at it’s widest.

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@GregoryFariss
@GregoryFariss - 04.04.2021 23:31

Wide open and shallow depth of field let’s you define the focal point of the photo, your wife or the front flower. Closing down the lease puts everything in focus, which is often desired for landscape or architectural photos like Spaceship Earth or the Mexico Pavilion.

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@paulk329
@paulk329 - 05.04.2021 00:51

Great vlog Bill.📷👍🏻

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@JohnArmwood
@JohnArmwood - 05.04.2021 02:03

Excellent presentation and easy for anyone to understand. I really enjoy the videos you guys put out. I am curious about the name change on the channel. Did Disney claim copyright infringement?

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@gijoeljamesmaldonado
@gijoeljamesmaldonado - 05.04.2021 16:30

I'm new at photography and your reasons was real world for me at my Family Easter Party, blew my mind.

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@jimwlouavl
@jimwlouavl - 06.04.2021 05:07

Good points. You have an engaging presentation style. I’ve realized recently that it takes a little experience with a new lens to see how much depth of field it has and how the background looks. It takes a lot of experience for that to become baked into one’s mental firmware.

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@DuragVince-
@DuragVince- - 08.04.2021 17:40

Hey, great video.

Question for you: Why would you need to put an ND filter on to use 1.8 when you can increase the shutter speed? Wouldn’t that be the same or does the ND do something different?

Thanks

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@justone4619
@justone4619 - 10.05.2021 23:25

Very clear presentation. Thanks! New sub.

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@cdesfusa
@cdesfusa - 13.05.2021 01:38

You, basically, rock

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@harleyrider9166
@harleyrider9166 - 21.06.2021 01:13

@5m45s. I bet you can’t shoot that 24-70mm at whatever aperture you want..LOL. How about f/1.8😜 Just joking. Remember some people on here will take your every word literal so be careful how you say things, especially for your beginners audience.

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@tangled6931
@tangled6931 - 27.11.2021 21:54

when i use my Canon 50mm f/1.8, I get pronounced vignetting. I understand that's common with this lens so even though I would like to use it wide open, I typically do not. It's disappointing.

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