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- Bat-Frog
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Judging by your posts in this thread, you've got oodles of time for it.Sorry.... got zero time for all this crap about bokeh and stuff that's of no importance. I lose my patience with it.
Judging by your posts in this thread, you've got oodles of time for it.Sorry.... got zero time for all this crap about bokeh and stuff that's of no importance. I lose my patience with it.
I've wondered where that had got to.
It's been going on years I remember people banging on about 'perfect doughnuts' on 500mm Mirror Lenses long before the word Bokeh was even invented !
Assuming you are serious, don't you think part of the point is that if the out of focus blur is striking then it can be distracting attention from the subject - obvious example is the doughnuts from mirror lenses, already cited here.
Of course.... which is why no one uses them any more. Let's be honest though.... If I did blind tests on you, you'd not be able to identify a single lens accurately by it's "bokeh" in the real world, so it's all b******s.
I think that's me you're misquoting ;-) there. I struggled to characterise Mike's relationship to the word and settled on "introduced" since he commissioned articles about it in the early days and I *think* advocated the present spelling of the Japanese word(s).So nobody could identify any lens by its bokeh, yet the bokeh of mirror lenses is so horrid nobody uses them any more?
The doughnut bokeh of mirror lenses is not just the exception which "proves" the rule, in the popular misuse of that aphorism. As it happens my 500mm mirror lens, the Sony/Minolta one which is the only one with AF, is one of my favourite lenses. I often bung it in my bag just in case something unexpectedly distant and interesting turns up. I share enthusiasm for that lens with Michael Johnson of Luminous Landscape, already not quite correctly cited in this thread as the inventor of the term "bokeh", although he has written a lot about it.
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But could you identify your beloved mirror lens against another make of mirror lens? Could you identify a 70-200 2.8 lens of one make against another? I think that was the point, not comparing apples to oranges.So nobody could identify any lens by its bokeh, yet the bokeh of mirror lenses is so horrid nobody uses them any more?![]()
While not delivering as good an image as its much bigger and heavier (and much more expensive) refractive competitors, it's still better at delivering distant wildlife detail than the 300mm end of any zoom.
why compare it to a 300mm zoom? Cost? Why would anyone try expect much from a heavily cropped image using a lens with almost half the reach?
These are around £630 for which I'd buy a second hand canon 100-400, on a crop sensor camera gives a much better result....

