N-Photo

(Barry) #1
What you’ll learn
How your Nikon’s
aperture setting
allows you to control
how much of the
subject is sharp from
near to far, which is
usually referred to as
depth of field.

What you’ll need
A scene with points
of interest at
different distances
from the camera,
such as a landscape
with several subjects
located from near to
the far distance.

Close-ups and depth of field


The aperture isn’t the only setting
that will affect the depth of field in
your images. The distance from your
Nikon to the subject will also alter
the amount of the scene that is
sharp. With close-ups you’ll find that
depth of field is much smaller than
when shooting at normal distances,
so you can also try repeating this
exercise, but with a smaller subject,
and focusing as close as possible
with your standard zoom.

Position your Nikon and
focus on a subject in the
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aperture-priority exposure
mode. Now take a series of images going
from the widest available aperture on your
lens to the smallest, in whole stops,
ensuring that the focus doesn’t alter
between each shot. A typical sequence for
this will be f/4, f/5.6, f/8, f/11, f/16 and f/22.
Enlarge the images on your camera’s LCD
or on your computer. Check that the subject
that you focused on is sharp, and then look
at objects behind and in front of it. The
results you get will depend on the focal
leng t h of you r len s a nd t he di st a nce
between the subject and the camera, but
in our shots both the background and
foreground subjects are blurred at f/4 and
f/5.8. At f/8 t he r u i ned c hu rc h i s a l most
sharp, but the foreground subjects are very
soft, while at f/11 the church is sharp. The
foreground doesn’t become sharp until f/22.

4 | Depth of field


What you’ll learn
How changing the ISO
affects the noise and
quality of your shots.

What you’ll need
You can shoot almost
any subject for this
exercise, but you’ll
find it easiest to see
the effects of noise in
plain, smooth-toned
areas such as skies,
rather than areas
where there is lots of
fine detail. You may
also need a tripod if
you want to use slow
shutter speeds at low
ISO settings.

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priority exposure mode,
and set the aperture narrow
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(around f/8 or f/11 if you are using the
w ide set t i ng on you r st a nda rd zoom).
Take a test exposure at the lowest ISO.
Now take a series of images moving from
the lowest ISO to the highest, doubling the
value for each step. So if your Nikon has a
lowest ISO of 100 you will have a sequence
of images at 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600 and
so on. Remember that changing the ISO
will affect the shutter speed if you use
aperture-priority exposure mode, so
any moving subjects may be recorded
differently during the sequence.
You can assess the noise from your Nikon
by zoom i ng i n on t he sa me a rea of eac h
image to check how much noise is visible.

5 | Learn about ISO


ISO100 ISO1600 ISO6400 ISO25600

TAKE IT FURTHER


10
mins

20
mins

f/4

f/11

f/22

http://www.digitalcameraworld.com March 2016 29


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