![]() ![]() Then, just put your focal point on your subject, focus, and shoot. To get the most bokeh from the shot, use the widest aperture you have available. Once you’ve found your small light sources for bokeh, turn your camera to aperture priority mode (or full manual mode if you prefer). Tip: Want to test your scene for bokeh? Simply turn the camera to manual focus and adjust until that background is completely out of focus. That means if you shoot up close to your subject and keep the background farther away, you’ll get a softer background. Remember, anything that effects depth of field will also play a role in creating that soft bokeh. Anything that makes a small pin point of light, with the right lens, will work to make bokeh. Bokeh can even be added to studio set ups using string lights or even by lighting up a crumpled piece of tinfoil. A city skyline in the distance, traffic and street lights will all work as well. Man-made light sources can also be perfect bokeh material. Water droplets also tend to grab some of that light to create bokeh when out of focus. Shooting directly into an unobstructed sun will not create bokeh, but the sun filtering through or even reflecting off the leaves of trees will create bokeh. Once you have a fast lens and know what to look for, capturing bokeh is simple - and fun.įirst, pay attention to your background as you shoot. These lenses tend to be pricey, however, and for enthusiasts and beginners, basic prime lenses are often an affordable way to get that background bokeh. That high-end lens tends to have special lens coatings and optics designed for a softer background - some of them even reach apertures wider than f/1.8. Most lens manufacturers have a general prime lens and a pro or art lens. Even within prime lenses though, some options are better than others. Prime lenses tend to have better bokeh than zoom lenses because they typically have wider apertures. ![]() Most newer lenses create a circular bokeh with a higher number of aperture blades - but even with new lenses, all bokeh is not created equal. Bokeh can even be awkwardly shaped - the number of aperture blades the lens has determines the shape of the bokeh, if there’s only a few, that circle will actually look more like a hexagon. Those orbs created by light points will have smooth edges that slowly fade, instead of ending abruptly.Ĭircles with harder edges tend to be less visually appealing, since they distract more from the subject. Good bokeh is generally considered as a soft background. While the subject may be the star of the photograph, bokeh determines just how much that object (or person) stands out from the background. You may have heard photographers ask, how good is the bokeh? or say look at that amazing bokeh - but what makes bokeh good? Aren’t out-of-focus circles just out-of-focus circles? ![]()
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