I was going to add that Harold Merklinger has an illuminating article on
bokeh at http://www.trenholm.org/hmmerk/ATVB.pdf - but it turns out that
your link is to the same article!
So instead, I will repeat the recommendation to look at the rest of
Merklinger's work at http://www.trenholm.org/hmmerk/ for a different voew
on DoF, and various swinging shifty stuff.
--
Piers
-----Original Message-----
From: olympus-owner@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:olympus-owner@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Moose
Sent: 07 June 2005 21:57
To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [OM] Re: Apertures, where is f22 ?
Der Eiserne Reiter wrote:
>Winsor,
>
>this is true for some lenses, but not for others. For example, the 35/2
>peaks at f11 and f16, in Gary's test. Also, I am wondering if it
>depends on the shape of the aperture, nr. of blades, etc.
>The other day, on *bay, I saw the picture of a Zeiss lens with a
>triangular aperture and was wondering what this did to the picture.
>
Where the aperture is located in comnplex lens designs affects what absolute
physical size it is and thus where diffraction becomes a problem.
Aperture shape could certainly have an effect, although what it might be, I
don't know. Shape does have a big effect on bokeh/OOF images
<http://www.darkroom.com/MiscDocs/bokeh.pdf>.
Moose
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