A (Slightly) Better Aperture-Comparison Presentation
Note: this article may not appear properly in news readers.
This article contains interactive aspects that are likely removed by most news readers. Please see this particular article directly on Jeffrey's blog for full functionality.
Probably the last of these for a while, as I'm off tomorrow to travel
for a few weeks, but here's a sequence of different-aperture shots taken looking down
a railing on the covered bridge in the gardens of the Heian Shrine (平安神宮) in Kyoto Japan,
where my previous post left us.
div#dOuKyBVDgVDgsdA img { width:690px; height:450px; visibility:hidden; position:absolute; top:0; left:0; border: solid 10px #311}




Animatable (4 frames) — slowly sweep mouse from side to side to view different apertures
写真の上をマウスであちこちにゆっくり動かすといろいろな絞りの影響を見えます。
1)return true;var x=Math.floor((e.clientX||e.pageX)/BW);if(X==0)X=x;else if(x!=X){var which=x>X?i+(x-X):i-(X-x);if(which>=I.length)which=I.length==2?0:I.length-1;else if(which
Though with fewer shots, this scene perhaps makes for a better example
than the one I posted the other day in “The Effects of
Aperture on a Subtle, Tranquil Cluster of Cherry Blossoms”.
Still, the shutter-speed one from earlier in the month (“The Effect of Shutter Speed on the Appearance of Flowing
Water”) is better yet.
Jeffrey E.F. Friedl's Blog
- Jeffrey E.F. Friedl's profile
- 13 followers
