Understanding Aperture in Photography: A Comprehensive Guide

Understanding Aperture in Photography: A Comprehensive Guide

What is an aperture?

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Aperture refers to the opening in a camera lens that regulates the amount of light entering the camera. Analogous to the iris in the human eye, the lens aperture can be adjusted to control the size of the pupil, affecting the exposure and creative aspects of a photograph.

Aperture and Your Eyes

Similar to the way your eyes adapt to varying light conditions, the camera’s aperture can be adjusted. Enlarging or shrinking the aperture controls the light reaching the camera sensor, influencing the overall brightness of the image.

Creative Control with Aperture

Aperture plays a pivotal role in shaping the artistic elements of a photograph. By manipulating aperture settings, photographers can control the depth of field, adding dimension to their images. A wide aperture creates a shallow depth of field, ideal for portrait photography, as it blurs the background and emphasizes the subject. Conversely, a narrow aperture results in a large depth of field suitable for landscapes, ensuring both foreground and background are sharply captured.

Effects on Exposure

Aperture significantly impacts the exposure of photographs. A large aperture (wide opening) allows more light, resulting in a brighter image, making it suitable for low-light conditions. Conversely, a small aperture (narrow opening) decreases the amount of light, producing darker images. Understanding how aperture affects exposure is crucial for adapting to different lighting scenarios.

Depth of Field

Depth of field refers to the range of sharpness in a photograph, from foreground to background. Aperture is a key factor influencing the depth of field. Choosing a large aperture creates a shallow depth of field, isolating the subject from the background. This is popular in portrait photography, where the background blur enhances the focus on the subject. Conversely, a small aperture increases the depth of field, maintaining clarity from the foreground to the background, making it ideal for landscapes and architecture.

Visual Understanding Through Video

For those who prefer visual learning, a video accompanies this guide, covering the basics of aperture, its workings, and its effects on photography. This video provides a comprehensive overview of the aperture-related concepts discussed in this guide.

Visual Understanding Through Video
aperture

What are F-Stop and F-Number?

So far, we have only discussed apertures in general terms, like large and small. However, it can also be expressed as a number known as “f-number” or “f-stop,” with the letter “f” appearing before the number, such as f/8.

Most likely, you have noticed the aperture written this way on your camera before. On your LCD screen or viewfinder, your aperture will usually look something like this: f/2, f/3.5, f/8, and so on. Some cameras omit the slash and write f-stops like this: f2, f3.5, f8, and so on. For example, the Nikon camera below is set to an aperture of f/8:

An image of F-stop on the LCD of a camera. Understanding aperture in photography.
Aperture is labeled in f-numbers, and in this case, I’m using f/8.

So, f-stops are a way of describing the size of the aperture for a particular photo. If you want to find out more about this subject, we have a comprehensive article on f-stop that explains why it’s written that way and is worth checking out.

Large vs Small Aperture

There’s a catch—one important part of the aperture that confuses beginning photographers more than anything else. This is something you really need to pay attention to and get correct: Small numbers represent large apertures, and large numbers represent small apertures!

That’s not a typo. For example, f/2.8 is larger than f/4 and much larger than f/11. Most people find this awkward, since it goes against our basic intuition. Nevertheless, this is a fact of photography. Take a look at this chart:

Size of Aperture Chart
As you can see, an f-stop like f/16 represents a much smaller aperture opening than something like f/2.8.

This causes a huge amount of confusion among photographers because it’s completely the opposite of what you would expect at first. However, there is a reasonable and simple explanation that should make it much clearer to you: Aperture is a fraction.

When you are dealing with an f-stop of f/16, for example, you can think of it like the fraction 1/16th. Hopefully, you already know that a fraction like 1/16 is clearly much smaller than the fraction 1/4. For this exact reason, an aperture of f/16 is smaller than f/4. Looking at the front of your camera lens, this is what you’d see:

An illustration that compares f/4 and f/16 apertures on a camera

So, if photographers recommend a large aperture for a particular type of photography, they’re telling you to use something like f/1.4, f/2, or f/2.8. And if they suggest a small aperture for one of your photos, they’re recommending that you use something like f/8, f/11, or f/16.

How to Pick the Right Aperture

Now that you’re familiar with large vs. small apertures, how do you know what aperture to use for your photos? Let’s revisit two of the most important effects of aperture: exposure and depth of field. First, here is a quick diagram to refresh your memory on how aperture affects the exposure of an image:

An illustration of aperture and how it affects exposure

If you’ve read the prior chapter in our Photography Basics guide covering shutter speed, you already know that aperture isn’t the only way to change how bright a photo is. Nevertheless, it plays an important role. In the graphic above, if I didn’t allow myself to change any other camera settings like shutter speed or ISO, the optimal aperture would be f/5.6.

In a darker environment where you aren’t capturing enough light, the optimal aperture would change. For example, you may want to use a large aperture like f/2.8 at night, just like how our eye’s pupils dilate to capture every last bit of light.

An illustration of using large apertures at night

As for depth of field, recall that a large aperture value like f/2.8 will result in a large amount of background blur (ideal for shallow-focus portraits), while values like f/8, f/11, or f/16 will give you a lot more depth of field (ideal for landscapes and architectural photography).

Depth of Field at Different Aperture Settings

In fact, depth of field is the part of the aperture that I recommend thinking about the most. My process for almost every photo I take goes like this:

  1. Ask myself how much depth of field I want
  2. Set an aperture that achieves it
  3. Set a shutter speed that gives my photo the proper brightness
  4. If that shutter speed leads to unsharp photos thanks to too much motion blur, dial back the shutter speed and raise my ISO instead
  5. Win photo contest:
Here is a quick chart that lays out everything we’ve covered so far:
Aperture Size Exposure Depth of Field
f/1.4 Very large Let in a lot of light Very thin
f/2.0 Large Half as much light as f/1.4 Thin
f/2.8 Large Half as much light as f/2 Thin
f/4.0 Moderate Half as much light as f/2.8 Moderately thin
f/5.6 Moderate Half as much light as f/4 Moderate
f/8.0 Moderate Half as much light as f/5.6 Moderately large
f/11.0 Small Half as much light as f/8 Large
f/16.0 Small Half as much light as f/11 Large
f/22.0 Very small Half as much light as f/16 Very large

Setting Aperture in Your Camera

If you haven’t guessed it already, we highly recommend selecting your aperture manually as a photographer. If you allow the camera to set it automatically, you are likely to end up with the completely wrong depth of field in your image.

There are two modes in photography that allow you to select the aperture manually. These are aperture-priority mode and manual mode. Aperture-priority mode is written as “A” or “Av” on most cameras, while manual mode is written as “M.” Usually, you can find these on the top dial of your camera (read more in our article on camera modes):

An image of the camera mode dial on a Nikon DSLR

In aperture-priority mode, you select the desired aperture, and the camera automatically selects your shutter speed. You can select ISO manually or automatically. Aperture priority mode is great for everyday photography, where you rarely need to worry about any camera settings other than aperture. It’s what I use 95% of the time, even for professional landscape and portrait photography.

In manual mode, you select both aperture and shutter speed manually. (ISO can again be manual or auto.) Manual mode takes more time and usually gives you the same results as aperture priority anyway. It’s only needed in special situations where you need a consistent exposure from shot to shot or when the camera’s meter is messing up. I use it for Milky Way photography and for portraiture with flash.

Minimum and Maximum Aperture of Lenses

Every lens has a limit on how large or small the aperture can get. If you take a look at the specifications of your lens, it should say what the maximum and minimum apertures are. For almost everyone, the maximum aperture will be more important because it tells you how much light the lens can gather at its maximum (basically, how dark of an environment you can take photos in and how much of a shallow focus effect you can achieve).

A lens that has a maximum aperture of f/1.4 or f/1.8 is considered a “fast” lens because it can pass through more light than, for example, a lens with a “slow” maximum aperture of f/4.0. That’s why lenses with large apertures usually cost more.

By comparison, the minimum aperture is not that important because almost all modern lenses can provide at least f/16 at the minimum. You will rarely need anything smaller than that for day-to-day photography.

With some zoom lenses, the maximum aperture will change as you zoom in and out. For example, with the Nikon 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 AF-P lens, the largest aperture shifts gradually from f/3.5 at the wide end to just f/5.6 at the longer focal lengths. More expensive zooms tend to maintain a constant maximum aperture throughout their zoom range, like the Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8. Prime lenses also tend to have larger maximum apertures than zoom lenses, which is one of their major benefits.

The maximum aperture of a lens is so important that it’s included in the name of the lens itself. Sometimes, it will be written with a colon rather than a slash, but it means the same thing (like the Nikon 50mm 1:1.4G below).

Nikon 50mm f/1.4G AF-S lens - this lens has a maximum aperture of f/1.4

Examples of Which Aperture to Use

Now that we have gone through a thorough explanation of how aperture works and how it affects your images, let’s take a look at the situations where you’d want to use various f-stops.

  • f/0.95 – f/1.4 Such “fast” maximum apertures are only available on premium prime lenses, allowing them to gather as much light as possible. This makes them ideal for any kind of low-light photography (such as photographing the night sky, wedding receptions, portraits in dimly lit rooms, corporate events, etc.). With such wide f-stops, you will get a very shallow depth of field at close distances, where the subject will appear separated from the background.
  • f/1.8 – f/2.0 – Some enthusiast-grade prime lenses are limited to f/1.8, which still has very good low-light capabilities. Also, if your purpose is to yield aesthetically pleasing images with shallow focus, these lenses will be of tremendous value. Shooting between f/1.8 and f/2 typically turns your backgrounds nice and creamy for portraiture and other similar types of photography.
  • f/2.8–f/4 – Most zoom lenses are limited to a maximum aperture of f/2.8–f/4 at best. While they are not as capable as f/1.4 lenses in terms of light-gathering capabilities, they are still enough to shoot in reasonably low-light conditions, especially if the lens or camera has image stabilization

    . You’ll get some subject separation at these apertures, but usually not enough to make the background completely fuzzy. Such apertures are great for travel, sports, and wildlife photography.

  • f/5.6–f/8 – This is the right starting point for most landscape and architectural photography. It’s also ideal for documentary and portrait photography where you don’t want a blurry background. Also, most lenses are sharpest around f/5.6, which doesn’t matter as much as getting the right depth of field but is still nice.
  • f/11–f/16 – Typically used for photographing scenes where as much depth of field as possible is needed, like macro photography or landscape photography with a nearby foreground. Even though these apertures offer more depth of field, they do lose some low-level sharpness due to the effect of lens diffraction.
  • f/22 and smaller: Only shoot at such small apertures if you know what you are doing. Sharpness suffers greatly at f/22 and smaller apertures because of diffraction, so you should avoid using them when possible. If you need to get more depth of field, it is usually best to move away from your subject or use a focus stacking technique instead.

You’ve made it this far, but are you willing to learn more about aperture? So far, we have only touched on the basics, but aperture does so much more for your photographs. Let’s take a closer look.

Everything Aperture Does to Your Photos

Ever wondered how else aperture affects your photographs aside from brightness and depth of field? In this part of the article, we will go through all the other ways aperture impacts your images, from sharpness to sunstars, and tell you exactly why each matters.

A photo of a stormy sand dunes - how aperture affects photos
A landscape image captured at f/16 brings everything from foreground to background into focus. Diffraction can be a problem at such small apertures, as explained below.

Before diving into too many specifics, here’s a quick list of everything aperture affects in photography:

  • The brightness and exposure of your photos and depth of field, as discussed so far
  • Sharpness loss due to diffraction
  • Sharpness loss due to lens quality
  • Starburst effects on bright lights
  • Visibility of camera sensor dust specks
  • The quality of background highlights (bokeh)
  • Focus shift on some lenses
  • Ability to focus in low light (under some conditions)
  • Controlling the amount of light from the flash

1. The Negative Effect of Diffraction

So, if you’re a landscape photographer who wants everything as sharp as possible, you should use your lens’s smallest aperture, like f/22 or f/32, to get maximum depth of field, right?

No!

If we go back and take a close look at the photo of the lizard from earlier in this article, where I used apertures of f/4 and f/32, you can see how diffraction is making the second shot less sharp. Here are the images when zoomed in to 100% view:

Cropped f-4 versus f-32 sharpness due to diffraction
The photo at f/32 loses low-level sharpness even though it has more depth of field

Here, you’re seeing an effect called diffraction. Physics majors will know what I’m talking about, but diffraction is a foreign concept to most people. So, what is it?

Diffraction is actually quite simple. When you use a tiny aperture like f/32, you literally squeeze the light that passes through your lens. It ends up interfering with itself, growing blurrier, and resulting in photos that are noticeably less sharp.

At what aperture does diffraction start to become an issue? It depends on a number of factors, including the size of your camera sensor and the size of your final print. Personally, on my full-frame camera, I see hints of diffraction at f/8, but it’s not enough to bother me. I actually use even smaller apertures, like f/11 and f/16, all the time when I have a close foreground in landscape photography. However, I try to avoid f/22 or smaller, since I lose too much detail at that point.

Diffraction isn’t necessarily a huge problem, but it exists. Don’t be afraid to take pictures at f/11 or f/16 just because you lose a little bit of sharpness. In many cases, the added depth of field is worth the tradeoff.

problem;In macro photography, diffraction can be a bit more of a problem close-focusing actually makes your effective aperture a lot smaller than it really is. Although the math behind that gets a bit complicated, basically, shooting at f/11 at macro distances will show diffraction a lot more than if you’re shooting a landscape at f/11. In other words, keep an eye out for diffraction when shooting macro.

Side Note

If your camera has a smaller sensor or a very high pixel density, you’ll see diffraction sooner. On APS-C sensors (like the Nikon D3x00 series, Nikon D5x00 series, Fuji X-series, Sony A6x00 series, and many others), divide all these numbers by 1.5. On Micro Four-Thirds cameras (like those from Olympus and Panasonic), divide all these numbers by 2. In other words, I don’t recommend using the f/11 with a micro-four-thirds camera since it’s equivalent to the f/22 with a full-frame camera.

2. Lens Aberrations

Here’s a fun one. For some reason, everyone wants to take sharp photos! One of the ways to do so is to minimize the visibility of lens aberrations. So, what are lens aberrations? Quite simply, they are image quality problems with a photo caused by your lens.

Although most problems in photography are caused by user error—things like missed focus, poor exposure, or a distracting composition—lens aberrations are entirely due to your equipment. They are fundamental optical problems that you’ll notice with any lens if you look too closely, although some lenses are better than others. For example, consider the image below:

Lens aberrations at wide aperture crop

What’s going on here? In this crop, most of the lights look smeared rather than perfectly round. On top of that, the crop just isn’t very sharp. That’s lens aberration at work! The lights didn’t look this blurry in the real world. My lens added to this problem.

It’s likely that your lenses are blurrier at certain apertures than others, and it’s almost always blurrier in the corner of the image than the center. That’s due to lens aberrations.

Aberrations can appear in several different forms. This article would be way too long if I explained every possible aberration in detail: vignetting, spherical aberration, field curvature, coma, distortion, color fringing, and more. Instead, it’s more important to know why aberrations occur, including how your aperture setting can reduce them.

It starts with a simple fact: designing lenses is difficult. When the manufacturer fixes one problem, another tends to appear. It’s no surprise that modern lens designs are extremely complex.

Unfortunately, even today’s lenses aren’t perfect. They tend to work fine in the center of an image, but everything gets worse near the edges. That’s because lenses are especially difficult to design around the corners.

Here’s a diagram that explains what I mean:
Lens cross section
                                                 Adapted from a Creative Commons image on Wikipedia.

And that brings us to aperture.

Many people don’t realize a simple fact about aperture: it literally blocks the light transmitted by the edges of your lens. (This doesn’t lead to black corners in your photos, because the center regions of a lens can still transmit light to the edges of your camera sensor.)

As your aperture closes, more and more light from the sides of your lens will be blocked, never making it to your camera sensor. Only the light from the center area will pass through and form your photo! As the diagram above shows, this central area is far easier for camera manufacturers to design. The end result is that your photos will have fewer aberrations at smaller and smaller apertures.

How does this look in practice? See the photos below (heavy crops from the top-left corner):
Sharpness comparison at different apertures

What you’re seeing above may look like an increase in sharpness, but it’s really a decrease in aberrations. The end result? At f/5.6 on this particular lens, my photo is much sharper than at f/1.4.

Here’s a key question: How does this balance out with diffraction, which harms sharpness increasingly more as your aperture gets narrower and narrower?

In practice, the answer is that most lenses end up sharpest around f/4, f/5.6, or f/8. Those “medium” apertures are small enough to block light from the edges of a lens, but they aren’t so small that diffraction is a significant problem. However, you’ll want to test this on your own equipment.

Of course, you can still take good photos at large apertures like f/1.4 or f/2. As I mentioned earlier, portrait photographers sometimes pay thousands of dollars to get a lens exactly for that purpose! So, don’t lock your lens to f/5.6 just because it gives you a tad more corner sharpness up close. It’s better to choose an aperture that gives you the right artistic look to the image.

Side Note

Some types of aberrations don’t change much as you stop down, or they may even get slightly worse. Axial chromatic aberration, for example – color fringes near the edges of your frame – often work that way. This is normal. It happens because a small aperture doesn’t inherently reduce aberrations; it simply blocks light that has passed through the edges of your lens. So, naturally, if the edges aren’t the source of your problem, you won’t see an improvement by stopping down.

3. Starburst and Sunstar Effects

Starbursts, also called sunstars, are beautiful elements that you’ll find in certain photographs. Despite the odd names – one a type of candy; the other a type of starfish – I always try to capture them in my landscape photos. Here’s an example:

A photo of aspen trees with the sun appearing as a sunburst
The sunbeams in this photo are purely a result of my aperture (in this case, f/16).

How does this work? Essentially, for every aperture blade in your lens, you’ll end up with a sunbeam. This only happens if you photograph a small, bright point of light, such as the sun when it is partly blocked. This is fairly common in landscape photography. If you want the strongest possible starburst, use a small aperture. Whenever the sun is in my photo, I almost always set f/16 purely to capture this effect.

Also, the starburst effect looks different from lens to lens. It all depends upon your aperture blades. If your lens has six aperture blades, you’ll get six sunbeams. If your lens has eight aperture blades, you’ll get eight sunbeams. And, if your lens has nine aperture blades, you’ll get eighteen sunbeams.

Wait, what?

That’s no typo. You always end up with an even number of sunbeams. If your lens has an odd number of aperture blades, you’ll get double the number of sunbeams.

It sounds strange, but the reason is actually quite simple. In lenses with an even number of aperture blades (and a fully symmetrical design), half of the sunbeams will overlap the other half. So, you don’t see all of them in your final photo.

Here’s a diagram to show what I mean:
Sunstars with even and odd aperture blades
When you have an even number of aperture blades, the sunbeams will overlap.

Most Nikon lenses have seven or nine aperture blades, resulting in 14 and 18 sunbeams respectively. Most Canon lenses have eight aperture blades, resulting in eight sunbeams. I took the photo above using the Nikon 20mm f/1.8G lens, which has 7 aperture blades. That’s why the image has 14 sunbeams.

It’s not just the number of blades that matters, though — their shape is also important. Some aperture blades are rounded (which results in a more pleasant out-of-focus background blur), and others are straight. If your goal is to capture good starbursts, straight aperture blades typically produce more defined rays of light.

Again, some lenses are better than others in this regard. For the best results, find a lens that’s known to have good starbursts, and then set it to a small aperture like f/16. That’s going to give you the strongest definition in your starbursts.

Starburst sunstar at small aperture
Another image with a starburst using a 24mm f/1.4 lens
NIKON D7000 + 24mm f/1.4 @ 24mm, ISO 100, 1/50, f/16.0

Finally, there’s one last related effect that I wanted to mention briefly. When you shoot into the sun, you might end up with flare in your photographs, as shown below. Depending upon your chosen aperture, the size and shape of this lens flare may change slightly. This isn’t a big deal, but it still exists.

Flare shaped like aperture blades
The flare in this photo is shaped like my lens aperture blades.

4. Small Aperture and Unwanted Elements

When you shoot through things such as fences, dirty windows, plants, and even water droplets on your lens, you’ll probably be disappointed by photos taken with a small aperture.

Small apertures like f/11 and f/16 give you such a large depth of field that you may accidentally include elements that you don’t want to be in focus! For example, if you’re shooting at a waterfall or by the ocean, an aperture of f/16 could render a tiny water droplet on your lens into a distinct, ugly blob:

Water droplet on the lens
A water droplet landed on my lens while taking this picture. My aperture was f/16, which means that it’s particularly visible.

In cases like that, it’s better just to use a wider aperture – something like f/5.6, perhaps – in order to capture the water droplet so out-of-focus that it doesn’t even appear in your image. In this particular case, you could simply wipe the droplet off, but that’s not possible if you’re shooting through something like a dirty window.

Side Note

You might have realized that this section is really just an extension of depth of field, and that’s true! However, it’s a bit of a special case, so I decided to mention it specifically.

Another example of shooting through things is when a piece of dust lands on your camera sensor. Unfortunately, as you change lenses, this is very common. Dust specks on your camera sensor will show up very clearly at small apertures like f/16, even if they’re invisible at something larger, like f/4.

Luckily, they are very easy to remove in post-production software like Photoshop or Lightroom, though it can be annoying if you have to remove dozens of them from a single photo. That’s why you should always keep your camera sensor clean.

Dust spots on the camera sensor
Dust specks on my camera sensor, taken at f/11 (a fairly small aperture). I circled some of the most visible spots in red.

5. Changes to Your Bokeh

What is bokeh? It’s simply the quality of your background blur. If you take a lot of portraits, macro photos, or wildlife photos, you’ll end up with out-of-focus backgrounds in most of your images. Naturally, you want them to look as good as possible! Different aperture settings will change the shape of your background blur.

Why is that? It’s because the background blur of your photographs always takes on the shape of your aperture blades. So, if your aperture blades are shaped like a heart, you’ll end up with heart-shaped background blur. Most of the time, that would qualify as distracting bokeh, although it’s kind of cute in this photo of two fake tortoises:

Heart-shaped background blur
Heart-shaped background blur, due to a heart-shaped aperture. I didn’t take this photo, unfortunately. Downloaded as Creative Commons.

On some lenses, aperture blades change shape a bit as they open and close. Large aperture settings (such as f/1.8) often have rounder background blur compared to smaller aperture settings. You’ll also get more background blur at large apertures, since your depth of field is thinner.

If bokeh is something that matters to you, you’ll want to test this on your particular lenses. Take some out-of-focus photos of a busy scene, each using a different aperture setting, and see which one looks the best. Most of the time, it will be the lens’s widest aperture, but not always.

Bokeh comparison at different apertures
Background blur sample from the top-left corner of the Nikon 24mm f/1.4G. In my opinion, the blur is best at f/1.4 and f/1.8, where it appears the roundest. However, this is inherently subjective.

6. Focus Shift Issues

With certain lenses – even if you’re in manual focus, and you don’t move your focus ring – your point of focus may shift as you use smaller and smaller apertures.

Obviously, this isn’t ideal. How do you tell if your lens has problematic focus shift? It’s pretty easy. Here are the steps:

  1. Put your camera on a tripod, and set your lens to manual focus.
  2. Find an object with small details that extends backwards, and focus at the center of it. A table with a tablecloth works well.
  3. Double check: When take a test photo and magnify it, you should see pixel-level details, as well as portions of the photo that are clearly out of focus.
  4. Take a photo at your lens’s widest aperture, and then at progressively smaller apertures. Be sure not to move your focus ring, and double check that you are using manual focus.
  5. On your computer, zoom into 100% on these photos and see if the sharpest point of focus moves continuously farther back as you stop down. The more it moves, the worse your focus shift issue is.

You’re done!

If your lens has extreme levels of focus shift, you’ll want to compensate for it:

  • With your widest aperture, just focus like normal.
  • As you stop down the aperture, make sure to set your aperture first, then focus second (rather than focusing first). On DSLRs, we recommend focusing in live view at these apertures, because the viewfinder always focuses at the widest aperture. Mirrorless camera users don’t need to worry about that.
  • With small apertures like f/8 and beyond, your depth of field will be large enough to hide any focus shift problems, so just focus like normal.
Side Note

When it comes down to it, focus shift is just another type of lens aberration. The edges of your lens may not focus light the same as the center, so, by stopping down — again, blocking light from the edges — your focus point changes slightly. That’s the underlying reason for this effect.

7. Ease of Focusing

The autofocus system on your camera doesn’t work well unless it receives plenty of light.

So, if you’re shooting with a cheaper lens like a 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6, the largest aperture isn’t bright enough to gather a lot of light. Focusing in dark conditions may be impacted. This is part of why a lot of pro photographers will use a more expensive lens like a 70-200mm f/2.8 instead.

You’ll also enjoy a brighter viewfinder (on a DSLR) or a less noisy viewfinder (on a mirrorless camera) if your lens has a large maximum aperture. If you shoot a lot in low light, this can make it much easier to focus and compose your images.

8. Flash Exposure

When using speedlights or any kind of strobes, it is important to remember that aperture takes on a whole different role of controlling flash exposure. While shutter speed’s role becomes controlling ambient light, aperture has an outsized impact on how much light from your flash is captured. Even though it’s just a subset of exposure, we wanted to include it in this section, since flash is tightly correlated to lens aperture.

A Chart of Everything Aperture Does

Once you understand the information above, you will know everything aperture does to your photos. However, it may take a few re-reads of this article before it’s all completely clear.

Practice is your best friend. Go outside, take some photos, and get a feel for aperture yourself.

If it helps, I compiled the main information in this article into a chart. This chart covers the most important effects of aperture in photography, as well as common terms that photographers use to describe their settings.

Note that to make this diagram easier to see, I did not darken or lighten any of the sample illustrations (as would occur in the real world). Instead, I simply wrote “brightest” through “darkest”:

Aperture Chart

Although this chart is intentionally simplified, it covers all the basics that you need to know. Feel free to download and print this chart if you find it useful. Just right-click on the image, then select “save as,” and pick the location where you want to store it.

Aperture FAQ

We put together some of the most frequently-asked questions related to aperture below.

What is Aperture?

Aperture can be defined as the opening in a lens through which light passes to enter the camera. It is expressed in f-numbers like f/1.4, f/2, f/2.8 and so on to express the size of the lens opening, which can be controlled through the lens or the camera. Our full article on aperture with many examples and illustrations starts here.

How Does Aperture Affect Depth of Field?

A large aperture results in a large amount of foreground and background blur. This yields a shallow depth of field, AKA a shallow focus effect. On the other hand, a small aperture results in a wide depth of field that can give you a sharp foreground and background for landscape photography.

How Does Aperture Affect Shutter Speed?

Aperture and shutter speed are controlled separately. However, they both affect a photo’s exposure. If you “open up” the aperture to capture a lot of light, you can use faster shutter speeds like 1/1000 second. Or, if you “stop down” the aperture to get more depth of field, you are reducing the amount of light that reaches the camera sensor, which requires a longer shutter speed to yield an image with the same brightness.

How Does Aperture Affect Bokeh?

Bokeh refers to the quality of out-of-focus highlights of the image rendered by the camera lens. Using the maximum aperture of the lens will typically yield circular background highlights of large size, whereas stopping down the lens will typically result in highlights looking smaller and taking different shapes such as heptagon. These shapes depend on the number of aperture blades and their roundness. Here is an image of a 50mm f/1.4 prime lens stopped down to f/2.8 and f/4 apertures:

What is the “Maximum Aperture” in a Lens?

Maximum aperture is how wide a lens can be open. It is usually expressed in f-stops such as f/1.4 and stated on the name of the lens. For example, the Nikon 35mm f/1.4G lens has a maximum aperture of f/1.4, whereas the Nikon 50mm f/1.8G has a maximum aperture of f/1.8. Some lenses have variable maximum apertures that change depending on focal length. A lens like the Nikon 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 has a maximum aperture of f/3.5 at 18mm and f/5.6 at 55mm.

 

Which Aperture is Best for Portrait Photography?

If your goal is to make an image with shallow depth of field, where the subject appears sharp while the foreground and the background appear blurry, then you should use very wide apertures like f/1.8 or f/2.8 (for example, if you are using a 50mm f/1.8 lens, you should set your lens aperture to f/1.8).

Which Aperture is Best for Landscape Photography?

When photographing landscapes, you often want to have as much depth of field as possible in order to get both foreground and background looking as sharp as possible. In such cases, it is best to stop down your lens to small apertures like f/8 or f/11.

Is it Better to have Higher or Lower Aperture?

It really depends on what you are photographing and what you want your image to look like. Lower apertures like f/1.8 allow more light to pass through the lens and yield shallow depth of field. In comparison, higher aperture numbers like f/8 block light while yielding wider depth of field. Both have their uses in photography.

Does Aperture Affect Focus?

Changing lens aperture can affect focus slightly due to focus shift. It is therefore best to stop the lens down to the desired aperture before focusing. On DSLR cameras, we recommend to use live view to focus at the desired aperture to reduce the negative effect of focus shift. This is due to the fact that DSLR cameras focus at the widest aperture.

At What Aperture is Everything in Focus?

That really depends on your camera’s sensor size, focal length of the lens, and how close your camera is to your subject. Generally, a small aperture like f/8 will give you enough depth of field to be able to make most of your image sharp. However, if the subject is too close to your camera, you might need to either move back or stop down the lens even further to get everything looking sharp.

How Does Aperture Affect Sharpness?

A wide aperture yields shallower depth of field, which some photographers mistake for a blurry photo. Wide apertures also show the weaknesses of the lens optical design, often resulting in visible lens aberrations. A narrow aperture, on the other hand, yields more depth of field, making more of the image appear sharp. However, narrow apertures also have more low-level image blur due to diffraction.

Which Aperture is Best for Sharpness?

Most lenses are not designed to yield good sharpness at their maximum aperture, which is why it is often desirable to stop down to smaller apertures like f/5.6 to get the best results. However, the best aperture of the lens, or its “sweet spot” really depends on its optical design.

What Aperture Should I Use to Get a Blurry Background?

If you want to get your subject isolated from the scene and make the background appear blurry, you should open up the lens aperture to its maximum aperture and get as close to the subject as possible. For example, if you are shooting with a 50mm f/1.8 prime lens, you should shoot at f/1.8 with your subject at a close distance. If you use a zoom lens, you should zoom in to the longest focal length and use the widest aperture, while being as close to your subject as you can. For example, if you are shooting with a 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 lens, you should zoom to 55mm, use the maximum aperture of f/5.6 and get close to your subject.

What Aperture Lets in the Most Light?

The maximum aperture of the lens, such as f/1.4.

What Aperture Lets in the Least Light?

The minimum aperture of the lens, such as f/22.

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