User avatar
By hdesbois
#78502
Photography basics for Maxwellians

One of the beauties of Mawell is that it’s basically a simulation of a traditional camera. Though most of 3d artists have some background in real photography, it might be useful to put together some essential notions about how to use the Maxwell camera for those who are not familiar with the manual settings. The purpose of this tutorial is not to teach photography (there are plenty of info about that around the web), but to go through the essential settings for the benefit of Maxwell beginners. This will be continued if there is a demand for it and if I have time.

The basic settings of the Maxwell camera are : Film size, Lens focal length, Focus distance, Aperture settings (value, shape, angle), film sensibility, shutter speed.
For still images without motion blur, all these parameters are normally set in this order.

Film size

In classical photography, a large film or CCD is used to capture more details. It compensate for the imperfection of the lenses (that’s why a high end 4 million pixel large CCD digital SLR will yield better looking pictures than a 8 million pixel compact camera). Of course, this is not the case with Maxwell : if you want detailed pictures, render high resolution. The film size setting in Maxwell is only a matter of depth of field. For a given angle of view, the smaller the film, the more DOF you get (that’s why under standard lighting conditions, everything seems in focus when shooting with compact digital camera, and that’s also why if you shoot in 16 mm, you can survive a less than ideal focus pulling whereas in 35 mm this would lead to certain disaster).
Unless you have a good reason to do otherwise, for instance for compositing, it’s generally ok to stick to the default 24*36 mm film size (135 SLR). You still have plenty of control over the DOF with the other settings.
By the way, a good thing to know about DOF is to consider it’s only dependent on two parameters : magnification (ratio between the size of the object and the size of the film) and aperture. The more important the magnification, the less DOF you get. If you are photographing an elephant, there is a good chance that it will be completely in focus ; this unlikely if your are photographing an ant.

Focal length

The effect of the of the focal length on the picture is linked to the film size. A standard lens has a focal length close to the size of the diagonal of the film. For instance, about 45 mm for a 24*36 film, or 85 mm for a 6*6 camera. Through a standard lens, the perspective is the more natural. The objects are neither closer nor farther than they seem to the naked eye.
The horizontal field of view when using a standard lens to take a 4/3 picture is about 45 degrees. That’s not enough for most interior shoots.
A shorter focal length is a wide angle lens. It gives a wider field of view and at the same time, it exaggerates the perspective. The deformations tend to be quite visible for objects located off axis. As it make all thing look smaller, you get more DOF with short lenses.
A lens longer than standard is a telephoto lens, it has a narrow field of view and squash the perspective. It doesn’t deforms the geometry, but the images tend to lack some depth.
Here are some standard focal length for 24*35 film :

18 or 20 mm : very short lens. Horizontal FOV : 89 or 83 ° for 4/3 image. Useful in really tight situations, but exaggerates the perspective a lot. If you want your 9 square meter room look the size of average gymnasium, that’s the way to go. I would not recommend using this unless you really want a special effect.

24 mm : quite short, FOV 73°. Less extreme than above. About the shortest lens I would care to use for an interior shot without feeling bad. Indeed, I would not go under 28 if I can avoid it (64°).

35 mm : all purpose short lens, with 54° FOV. Add a nice dynamism for exterior and interior shots without altering too much the reality. A favorite for action shots. In real life, I’d choose this lens if I can only have one.

50 mm : standard lens with 44° FOV. True-to-life lens. Useful for that.

80 or 135 mm lens : telephoto lenses with 25 or 15 ° FOV. Useful when you need to squash a little the depth or your picture. The first is often a favorite for the portrait, since it avoid the « big nose small ears » effect you get with shorter lens and at the same time allow for a reduced DOF thus better focusing on the main subject. I would not normally care to use longer lenses with Maxwell, since you have normally no limits as where to place the camera. Now, if you want to reproduce this « paparazzi look » in a picture, go for at least 300 mm (7° FOV).

Diaphragm
Diaphragm is a small mechanical device use to reduce the diameter (or aperture) of the lens. It has two purposes : to control the quantity of light going through the lens and to give some control over the DOF. The aperture is set by specifying a number, or f-stop. This number is the ratio between the diameter of the lens and the aperture of the diaphragm : a 8 f-stop means that inner diameter of the diaphragm is 1/8 the diameter of the lens. In real life lenses, the aperture setting ring is etched with standards numbers corresponding to a 50% reduction of the surface (hence of the quantity of light) between two consecutive numbers. These numbers are : 1 (rarely seen, only, for SLR on one Leica and one Nikon lens, both 50 mm and both ridiculously expensive), 1.4, 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8, 11, 16, 22, 32. Real life lenses won’t normally use smaller aperture, but if you really need it, just multiply a number by square root of 2 to find the next one.
The larger the aperture, the smaller the DOF.
For objects much bigger than film size, you can consider that 1/3 of the DOF is located before the focus point (between camera and focus point), and 2/3 behind. So it’s generally a good idea to set the focus a little farther than the main subject of the picture.
When photographing very small objects, such as object significantly smaller than film size, you tend to get more DOF before the focus point than beyond. Anyway, in this case, the DOF is very small, and you may need to use extremely tight diaphragms such as 32 or more.

The shape of the diaphragm has an influence on the aspect of the focus blur. In particular, out of focus bright spots take the shape of the diaphragm. You can control this with shape and angle settings (broken in beta). Furthermore, the term « Bokeh » is used to describe the quality of the blur, notably its evenness. I’m not sure there is any control over this in Maxwell.

Film sensitivity

Quite self explaining. For still images without motion blur, you can leave the default settings and fine-tune your image interactively in the viewer. In real life, high ISO settings films or CCD tend to be noisier. No idea if it’s the same in Maxwell.

Shutter speed

Simply the time of exposure of the film. It is linked to exposure and motion blur. Control of motion blur could be the subject of a tutorial of its own, but we can keep this for later, especially as motion blur quality is quite poor in beta. So shutter speed should be adjusted to match the aperture settings and give a correct exposure.



HD
User avatar
By olbo
#78504
Well, ... you know what? Thanx a lot! :P :D ;)


take care
Oleg
User avatar
By Thomas An.
#78517
Very nice ! Thank you ... it is always good to hear these things from people with first-hand experience in the field.
User avatar
By Hervé
#78708
very cool from you Henri.... thanks..! :wink:
User avatar
By deesee
#78789
Thanks man. I am one step closer to understanding this stuff without actaully going out and buying a camera and taking pictures.
User avatar
By -Adrian
#78818
Good read, thanks.
User avatar
By hdesbois
#79941
Thanks for the link. Excellent information about Bokeh in the "cg bokeh" link.
The affirmation that the distortion is caused by the distance to the camera and not by the focal lenght is opticaly correct but a bit confusing. In real use, since short focal lenght lenses have wide field of view and thus include elements both close and far away in the picture, the perspective will almost always look unatural or exagerated. It's just the opposite for telephoto lenses : generaly, due to the narrow FOV, all elements are at some distance from the camera, and the image does look flattened.
HD
User avatar
By Hervé
#80007
hello Henri, is it true that if you want to be close from human view, you have to use a 50 MM lens... I heard that a long ago... :roll:
User avatar
By hdesbois
#80069
Hervé wrote:hello Henri, is it true that if you want to be close from human view, you have to use a 50 MM lens... I heard that a long ago... :roll:
If you look through the viewfinder of a 135 SLR camera fitted with a lens somewhere between 40 and 55 mm, objects won't look any closer or farther than to the naked eye. Hence, the perspective will just look right on the picture. So, you can say that 50 mm lense (for 24*36 film) is close to human eye (but of course, the some 45° FOV is much much narrower than natural human vision).

HD
User avatar
By Hervé
#80093
ok, thanks Henri.... now I am curious too about the vie angle.. 180°.... but maybe 70° really useful...? depend off course if you focal your eyes to a special center of interest...
User avatar
By hdesbois
#80406
Yes, I'm not sure. My guess is that we actually have a wide FOV, such 170°, but off-axis you don't really gather so much info : just usefull to not be ran over by the bus, and the like (pretty usefull, I agree). When it comes to actually look at the things, you have to direct your eyes at it, like when you are reading. Complicated question. You see with your brain as much as with your eyes. You are always scanning with rapid eye movement, so it's difficult to compare eyes with photolenses about FOV. Just guessing here, don't know a thing.
HD
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