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What is Martin Tai's one third focal length rule of thumb ?


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<TD><FONT COLOR="#FF0000"><FONT SIZE=+2> F/3 Rule of Thumb for Landscape Photography</FONT></FONT></TD>

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<P>For 35mm landscape photography, where distant objects such as moutains, buildings are the main object of interest in composition, focus the lens at infinty is the way to go. That greatly simplies depth of field in

travel photography.<P> But how to choose aperture in the middle of busy travel schedules ?

You are not going to pull out a Depth of field chart are you ?<P> I need a very very simple "rule of thumb"<P>

By analysis of the travel photo habit of myself and other poeple,

I find that most of the time, people take pictures hand held camera

at eye level. <p>

A Minox 35mm (or a SLR )held at eye level is ahout 1.5-1.6 meter off

ground, holding the camera level, the closeset point visible in the

viewfinder is the point of ground cut off by the bottom line of

of viewfinder.<P> Now suppose I want that point to be the hyperfocal point

, so what is the fstop ?

<P>I invented "Martin Tai's F/3 rule of thumb for landscape",

as I found out, that the required aperture = one third of focal length of 35mm camera !<P>

 

<P> Once I set the camera's aperture at F/3, focus the lens at infinity, then depth of field rules

tells us that everything from hyperfocal point to infinity will be sharp---- that is, everything

I see in the viewfiner will be sharp !

<P> For Minox GT-E, I set it at 35/3 = f11 , focus at infinity and shoot.

<P>

For my Leica Vario-Elmar 28-70 zoom lens which has no DOF scale as most zoom lenses are, I too set fstop = one third of focal length, and focus at infinity.

for example if I use 28mm short end, I choose 28/3 = F9 if I select F=45mm I select

aperture at 45/3= F16.....

 

 

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<h3> Proof of F/3 Rule </h3>

 

 

<P>The mathematic proof of "Martin Tai one third focal length rule of thumb" was posted to usenet .<P>

 

<PRE>

mountain

 

---

---

----

---

---

-----

-----

() --- ()

| - |

| --- /| \

h | ---- |

| ---- | \

/ \--------------------------------------------------------------------- -

D infinity

 

 

 

 

</PRE>

 

 

<P>

When a 35mm camera is held vertical and point at distant horizon,

the closest point on the ground cut of by the bottom line of viewfiner is

 

<pre> D=F*h/18

</pre><P> in which

<ul>

<li> F is focal length of lens,

<li> h is height of camera off ground,

<li>and 18 is half of 36mm frame length.

</ul>

<P> Let D= hyperfocal distance H=F*F/(fstop*coc)

<P>where <ul>

<li> F= focal length,

<li> coc= circle of confusion.</ul>

<P> Hence

 

<pre> F*h/18 = F*F/(fstop*coc );</pre>

 

<p> from which

 

<pre> fstop = 18*F/(h*coc )</pre><p>

Select

<ul><LI> h =1.6 meter,<LI> coc =1/30 mm </ul><P> then

 

<Pre> fstop =~~ F/3. </pre>

 

<p> Q.E.D.

 

<P><a href="http://www.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg.tcl?msg_id=000r7A">Lu Yu Pick Tea in the Mountains </a>

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Does the F/3 rule of thumb applies when camera is held horintally ?

Of course it does, as the closest cut off point on the viewfinder is further out.

It can be proved that the required fstop to make "what you see in viewfinder is what is sharp in picture" , the fstop =~~ F/4.

But to make thing simplest, F/3 rule of thumb should cover both situations.

<P><P>It is not necessary of to hold camera absolutely level for F/3 rule of thumb to work;

 

<ul><li> camera tilt up, the bottom line of viewfinder recedes further, F/3 aperture surely covers that.

<li> tilt the camera down, the viewfinder bottom lines cut

ground closer, but the center of viewfinder is not at infinity anymore,

you must now focus at where the center point is, but F/3 still applies

<li>in the extreme case when you point camera perpendicularly down on ground,

viewfinder covers a plane with very little depth, F/3 certainly works.

</ul>

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Hey, what about MInox ultraminature cameras ?

Well, Minox 8x11 cameras has fixed aperture, you have no choice. But still does F3.5 achieves "viewfinder sharp" when you stand up ?

Yes, it can be easily proven, that substite 5.5mm for 18mm and substite Minox's coc = 1/60mm, then the required "viewfinder sharp" fstop =~ F/5

Minox lens' focal length = 15mm, hence viewfinder sharp fstop =15/5 = F3.

So you see, F3.5 is more then enough for you Minox A/B/LX/TLX for travel photography,

just set lens at infinity and shoot, what you see in viewfinder will be sharp.

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