Choosing and Using Lenses Page 2

Internal flare—the loss of contrast and sharpness caused by light reflecting off internal lens-element surfaces—is pretty well controlled by the multiple coatings used in most of today's lenses. But flare can still occur when you're shooting toward a bright light source and rays from it strike the front lens element. A lens hood can keep stray rays from striking the front element and causing lens flare but the hood won't eliminate flare when the light source appears in the picture.

Vignetting is the cutting off of the image corners. The usual causes are thick filters or lens hoods that are too long, but it can also occur with wide-range zooms at their wide end. In this case, it's the result of an anamorphic lens attachment.

Manually focusable lenses are focused by rotating the focusing ring (A). Just turn the ring until the image appears sharp in the viewfinder (or, in the case of rangefinder cameras, until the two images merge into one). Many focusable lenses have a focusing scale (B) that indicates the distance at which the lens is focused. This autofocus lens also has an AF/M switch, used to switch between auto and manual focusing (although with Canon's Ultrasonic-motor EF lenses, you can adjust focus manually even in AF mode).

Lenses don't focus infrared rays at the same plane as visible light rays, so you must compensate for this when shooting black-and-white infrared film. First, focus in the normal manner (top photo), then set the focused-upon distance (15 feet here) opposite the infrared focusing index (bottom photo), generally marked by a red dot or letter R. Some lenses don't have an infrared focusing index.

The focal length of the lens controls magnification and field of view. Here are four photos shot from the same position using a 24mm wide-angle lens (A), a 50mm normal lens (B), a 100mm short telephoto (C) and a 200mm telephoto (D). Note that each time you double or halve the focal length, you double or halve the subject size, and halve or double the field of view.

Focal length and perspective are commonly misunderstood. (Perspective refers to the spatial relationships and relative sizes of objects in a scene.) Changing the focal length alone will not change the true perspective in a photograph. Changing the focal length only crops the image—changes the area included in the photograph. Changing camera position is what changes perspective.

Photo A was made with a 200mm lens. Note the size/distance relationships among the various elements of the scene.

Photo B was made from the same spot, by removing the 200mm lens and replacing it with a 24mm lens. Although all the elements in the scene are smaller than in the top left photo (and a lot more of the scene is included due to the 24mm lens's wider angle of view, making it look like the perspective might have changed), their spatial relationships have not changed. This is easier to see in photo C, which is a blow-up of the center section of the 24mm shot, so that it shows the same area of the scene as the 200mm shot. Notice that, aside from the fuzziness caused by the extreme degree of enlargement and the different amount of wind filling the sail, this shot is exactly the same as the top left photo made with the 200mm lens. The relationships among the various stationary elements of the scene are identical in the two photos; the perspective is the same.

Why, then, do photographers get the idea that long lenses compress perspective and short lenses expand it? Because we generally move closer to the subject (which expands perspective, far left) when using short lenses, and we generally shoot from far away (which compresses perspective, above) when using long lenses. But it is the camera-to-subject distance that produces the perspective, not the lens focal length.

The lens's aperture ring controls the amount of light the lens transmits, by adjusting the size of the opening in the lens diaphragm. The diaphragm openings represented by the f-numbers on the lens's aperture ring are called apertures or f-stops.

You probably noticed in the provious photo that the large f-number (f/22) represents a small opening, while the small f/number (f/1.4) represents a large aperture. That's because f-numbers are ratios—the ratio between the diameter of the diaphragm opening they represent and the focal length of the lens. For example, f/16 means the opening the the diaphragm is 1/16 the focal length of the lens; f/2 indicates an aperture diameter 1/2 the focal length of the lens. So the bigger the f-number, the smaller the opening and the less the light that reaches the film.
Curvature of field is yet another thing lens designers have to deal with: the image produced by a single lens element is focused on a curved plane, while the film is a flat plane. In normal photography, this isn't a great problem, but in close-up copy work and enlarging, flat-field lenses are necessary. Again, multiple elements help, as does stopping the lens down.

By now, you've probably concluded that stopping the lens down is the answer to all lens problems. In a way, it is. It reduces the effects of the aforementioned problems, and increases depth of field as well. But it also creates diffraction, the bending of light around obstacles in its path (the obstacle here being the lens diaphragm). When the lens is stopped down to small apertures, the light rays tend to bend away from the lens axis, reducing image sharpness. This is one reason why a pinhole camera, with all its depth of field, still produces fuzzy images—the tiny pinhole aperture diffracts light something fierce.

Today's computer-assisted lens designs and high-tech optical glasses and plastics provide us with highly corrected lenses that are amazingly sharp. But even so, most of them tend to be at their sharpest when used at middle apertures rather than when wide open or stopped all the way down. At wide apertures, the various aforementioned lens aberrations reduce sharpness, and at small apertures diffraction reduces sharpness. So, unless you need the depth of field provided by a small aperture, or need the speed of a wide-open aperture for low-light shooting, you'll generally get the sharpest results when using an intermediate f-stop.

While we're on the subject of lens problems, here are a few more. Distortion comes in two basic forms: pincushion and barrel. In pincushion distortion, straight lines near the edges of the frame bow in toward the center of the frame. With barrel distortion, straight lines near the edges of the frame bow out away from the center. Such distortions are often evident in zoom lenses, with barrel distortion appearing at short focal lengths and pincushion distortion at long focal lengths. There's not much you can do about distortion if it is present (just compose so that no straight lines appear near the edges of the frame), so it's wise to check for it before buying any lens.

Internal flare is a loss of contrast and sharpness caused by stray non-image-forming light reflected from inner lens surfaces, a bad side effect of multiple-element lenses. Most of today's lenses incorporate multicoated lens elements whose anti-reflection coatings greatly reduce the problem. Another form of flare occurs in backlit situations when light from the source directly strikes the front lens element. Using a lens hood, which extends in front of the lens and keeps extraneous light from striking the front element, will generally solve this problem. An added benefit of a lens hood is protection of the front element from fingers and rain.

A final lens problem is vignetting, the cutting off of the corners and edges of the image. This can be caused by a lens hood that is too long for the lens, or it can be inherent in the lens itself—it's especially evident in high-ratio zoom lenses, such as 28-200mm models. Stopping the lens down will generally eliminate inherent vignetting; switching to a shorter hood will eliminate lens-hood-caused vignetting.

Focusing
Some of the less-expensive point-and-shoot cameras have fixed-focus lenses (marketing folks call them "focus-free"), in which focus is permanently set at one distance (usually the hyperfocal distance—more on this later), relying on depth of field to render subjects from several feet away to infinity in reasonably sharp focus.

Lenses for more-advanced cameras come in two types: manual-focus and autofocus (of course, most autofocus lenses can also be focused manually). With manual-focus lenses, you turn the focusing ring to focus the lens. With simpler cameras, you set the focusing ring to a zone-focus symbol for near, medium or distant subjects; with reflex cameras, you turn the focusing ring until the subject appears sharp in the viewfinder.

With autofocus lenses, just point the AF frame in the viewfinder at the subject and lightly depress the shutter button, and the lens will automatically focus on the subject.

Autofocus systems in most compact point-and-shoot 35mm cameras employ an infrared beam and electronic triangulation, while those in AF SLRs (and some point-and-shoot models) use a phase-detection system that measures contrast to determine the amount of defocus. Infrared systems won't work through windows or on images in mirrors (the beam is deflected by the glass) or beyond 25 or 30 feet (beyond that, depth of field usually covers everything with point-and-shoot cameras), but are relatively inexpensive, and work in total darkness. Phase-detection systems can have problems with dimly lit and low-contrast subjects, but generally are more accurate. Autofocus isn't perfect, but today's AF SLRs work amazingly well under a wide variety of conditions.

With most lenses, the front element moves farther away from the film as you focus on closer subjects. Some lenses feature internal focusing, in which lighter central elements move rather than the heavier front elements, thus making for faster autofocusing and lenses that don't rotate or change their physical length as they focus.

You learned earlier that simple lenses tend not to focus all colors of light on the same plane. Even photographic lenses corrected for this do not focus infrared rays on the same plane as visible rays, so when using black-and-white infrared film, you must compensate for this. To make this easy, most lens makers include infrared focusing marks on their lenses. When using black-and-white infrared film, focus in the usual manner, then rotate the lens' focusing ring so that the focused distance appears opposite the infrared focusing mark rather than opposite the normal focusing index. (In color infrared film, two of the three emulsion layers are sensitive to visible light, so it's best to focus normally rather than using the infrared focusing mark. In any infrared shooting, it's wise to stop the lens down so depth of field can help compensate for the difference in focus plane between visible and infrared rays.)

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