Lenses

ÒWhatÕs the best lens for taking pictures?Ó
ÒAll of them, but only one at a time.Ó

A camera lens converts and focuses a scene onto photosensitive material. The lens is the glass ÒwindowÓ we see at the front of the camera. It is round and convex and sometimes has rings around it for focusing and setting aperture; sometimes also the shutter speed too.

There is no perfect camera lens for every need. A wide-angle (short focal length) lens will ÒseeÓ a wider angle of view and allow the photographer to record what is needed when confined by tight spaces. A telephoto (long focal length) lens will bring the subject closer, much the same as binoculars or a telescope. A telephoto us highly useful for taking pictures of distant wildlife when to move too closely the elk or bear might decide to flee.

A zoom lens, which covers a range of near and far, is a great tool for photographers who need versatility in a single lens.

But, each lens has its drawbacks. A wide-angle lens distorts the foreground and the background recedes unnaturally; vertical angles veer up and away. A telephoto lens is difficult to hold still enough by hand to prevent camera movement/blur. A tripod for stabilization is regularly required. The ÒlongerÓ the lens the smaller the maximum aperture is.

Zoom lenses would seem to combine the best of both worlds: wide-angle, normal, telephoto, and they are the most popular and widely used lenses today. Most digital and some automatic film cameras come equipped with zoom lenses. They offer the least amount of compromise to the majority of photographic hobbyists and average weekend shooters.

 

Wide-angle lenses distort unfavorably. Cows likely wonÕt care, but children and most self-respecting
adults will insist that the photographer, Òdestroy all copies immediately!Ó

 


Single Lens Reflex lenses
Left to right: 24mm wide angle, 135mm telephoto, 50mm normal, 300mm telephoto


Examples of same scene with different focal lengthsÐ

 
24mm, wide angle                                50mm, normal

 
135mm, short telephoto                300mm, long telephoto


Focal length/apertureÐ

The following group of photos was taken from the same spot. The camera was mounted to a tripod and lenses were changed to illustrate changes in focal length and aperture.

24mm wide-angleÐ

 
f/2.8                                                           f/22

50mm normalÐ

 
f/1.4                                                             f/16

 

135mm short telephotoÐ

 
f/2                                                                f/22

 

300mm long telephotoÐ

 
f/5.6                                                          f/22

 

Activity: Shoot a roll of film practicing with different focal lengths. Try photographing people/a person, with a wide-angle zoom lens setting or wide-angle lens. Practice setting various apertures with different focal lengths to see what happens with depth of field. DonÕt be hesitant to release the shutter. Consume film copiously just for play, to see Òwhat happens.Ó

For those of you who do not have a zoom lens or interchangeable lenses, practice moving closer to your subjectÐmove closer than youÕd ever do in Òreal life,Ó and see what happens.

For all of you, click the shutter button with abandon, especially when your instinct warns you not to because the photo surely wonÕt turn out. Watch what happens in the images you create!