![]() ![]() ![]() When there’s not much natural light available, like at sunrise, sunset or in the night, you should only use the main camera and one Black Eye lens attached to it. You need to use a lens on top of the iPhone main wide camera lens to get the best results in lowlight photography. If you’re a serious smartphone photographer who wants the Ultra-wide and telephoto on your smartphone, then you should consider using our wide selection of lenses on the main wide camera of the smartphone. The main wide camera lens is the winner of the three and also your good friend when you need the highest quality images on your iPhone 11 and 11 Pro. Get the best results with the main wide camera lens and a Black Eye lens. You can get very creative with the triple camera lens setup as you have everything from ultra-wide to telephoto, but the different lenses just aren’t on the same level of optical performance. Which will help to deal with lowlight shooting conditions much better than the previous f/2.4 aperture lens. Last, the telephoto camera comes with an upgraded f/2.0 aperture lens. To sum it up it’s a great lens during the day, but as soon as it gets darker, you will see it in the quality of the image. There are a few reasons, why it’s not so easy to make an ultra-wide lens with a fast aperture, but let’s not dive so deep into it this time. It doesn’t sound like a big difference, but for an example, the iPhone 4 has an aperture of f/2.8. The downside to this lens is, that the aperture is only an f/2.4. It’s fun, easy to use and makes very good results in good lighting conditions. The new Ultra-wide camera is the new guy in town on the iPhone. The crown jewel lens of the iPhone 11 Pro, is no doubt, the main wide camera with an f/1.8 aperture + few other great features like the Optical image stabilization and 100% autofocus pixels. So as you can see, the three different cameras have three different apertures. And as an example, we’ll use the new iPhone 11 Pro with it’s three different cameras, which all have different focal lengths and apertures. Now you should have a basic understanding of aperture, so let’s talk about the aperture on the new smartphones. If you shoot with the aperture wide open (f/1.8), then more light is allowed into the camera than if the aperture is closed down (f/22) to only allow a tiny hole of light to enter the camera. A high f-stop like f/22 means that the aperture hole is very small, and a low f-stop like f/1.8 means that the aperture is wide open. Cameras have been designed in the same way, just replace the pupil with aperture and the retina with the camera sensor.Īperture sizes are measured by f-stops. Like on a bright day or a dark street depending on how much light is needed to filter on the retina of the eye. The pupil of the human eye shrinks or expands in different lighting conditions. When you change the size of the opening, it changes your exposure in a few different ways.Īperture is like the camera’s eye and works similarly to the human eye. See if you can get adequate image quality with your current kit before spending £1200.Aperture is the opening of the lens that light goes through to land on your camera’s image sensor to make a picture. Try shooting on aperture priority and varying the shutter speed. I would suggest that if you need to ask this question you shouldn't rush into buying an expensive lens. Any guesses if the D80 will automatically respond to theĪvailable f stop and move from 1/320 to something around 1/500 ? I I use the D80 sports setting and that shoots around 1/320th orįaster. The 70-200 f2.8 is much bigger and much heavier. You will also have a much smaller depth of field, if that is important. That means 4 times the shutter speed at maximum aperture with the same ISO. If you are using it at 200mm for sports it will be at f5.6 maximum which means that it is 2 stops slower than the 70-200 f2.8 (which is f2.8 at all focal lengths). This means that it will have a maximum aperture of f3.5 at the wide end but f5.6 at the long end. I believe that the Nikon 18-200 is a f3.5-5.6 lens. Shutter speeds? The answer you gave suggests yes. So if I fork out on the 70-300 2.8 version, do I get seriously faster Do you increase the ISO to compensate for lower light? I use a D80 with a nikon 18-200 (3.5) and shoot a lot of sports in So let me try and put this into my kind of photography and see if you it was exactly the question I was looking to answerīefore spending £1,200 on a 70-300 2.8 zoom.ĪFAIK nobody makes a 70-300 f2.8 lens. ![]()
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