newlover said:Am new to photography.
Can share the limitation of this kit lens 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 based on your experience ?
The limit of this lens is the wide end is 18mm with widest aperture at f3.5 and longer end is 55mm with widest apeture at f5.6 :bsmilie:
No bokehlicious ):
No bokehlicious ):
Rashkae said:That just proves you don't know how to use the lens. The kit lens can blur the background wonderfully too. Bokeh will depend on the lens design.
luckyorange said:who say dont have?
it depened where ur target are, if u want bokeh u gotta shoot nearer....
who say dont have?
it depened where ur target are, if u want bokeh u gotta shoot nearer....
Welcome to the DSLR club. Since you are new, I suggest you experiment with your lens and improve on your framing and eye for details. Leave the limitation aside for the time being.
Technical limitations of this lens will be its not bright enough. I personally use a 17-50 for the past 5-6 years and am happy with it.
hmm meaning? the pic took will underexpose???
Haha I think I shall leave it to Rashkae to explain to you why you cannot "want bokeh" :bsmilie:
spree86 said:Nope, it means that the aperture does not open up wide enough. "Bright" lenses is another way of saying "fast" lenses, meaning lenses with wide apertures.
Haha I think I shall leave it to Rashkae to explain to you why you cannot "want bokeh" :bsmilie:
How does bright associate to fast ? :O
How does bright associate to fast ? :O
I still find it hard to use the word "bokeh" correctly. (and at times I still use it incorrectly..)
Haha it means "the quality and characteristics of the OOF areas" it quite confusing at the start
Ya...But to use it in a sentence, abit hard lar. (at least for me).
So, is this liner correct? > "The bokeh of this picture is nice"
I think this one is wrong > "The bokeh created by this lens is worse than the other lens"