- Joined
- Dec 22, 2022
- Messages
- 15
I really like this. A subject that intrigues me. I've spent a lot of time photographing, drawing and making paintings of fishermen's huts on the North Yorkshire coast.
I was unaware the the UK had dungeness. I have murdered many of these when I worked in the Alaskan fishery. I hadn't seen this thread before, but it brought back many happy memories.
The subject of the post is a place on the coast in Kent. It is not a crab
Can the figure f16.5 be a kind of shorthand for halfway between f16 and f22?
Being able to set an actual 16.5 would imply twelve index marks on the aperture-setting scale, which seems unlikely.
Can the figure f16.5 be a kind of shorthand for halfway between f16 and f22?
Being able to set an actual 16.5 would imply twelve index marks on the aperture-setting scale, which seems unlikely.
I have German lenses marked f4,5, 6.3. 9 13, 18 etc, f18 is a third of a stop down from f16,
This will depend on the shutter, not the lens.
I just wondered thats all. Anyway, what matters is the end result and the Dungeness photo is a good 'un. Because I favour the "Group f/64" approach, that is total image sharpness, I use f/32 all the time and just adjust the exposure. It keeps things simple. Well it works for me.
This is exactly how I would record an aperture between f16 and f22 even if "technically" that's incorrect.Can the figure f16.5 be a kind of shorthand for halfway between f16 and f22?
Being able to set an actual 16.5 would imply twelve index marks on the aperture-setting scale, which seems unlikely.