Nice work Grahame.
I am very happy that you "ran with it" - and this weekend too! (pun intended).
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My DoF “cheat sheets” which I’ve posted at CiC are
refined to include ONLY three apertures (F/2.8 F/5.6 and F/11) and ONLY three framings (Full Length; Half Shot and Head Shot) each at the two Camera Orientations (Vertical and Horizontal i.e. Portrait and Landscape).
Those provides a total of 18 ‘numbers’ which represent DoF. Although I have other refined sets and also my final-original more extensive DoF cheat sheets for the DoF for: 6x7; 6x4.5; 135 and APS-C Format Cameras I now “use” only the eighteen numbers from the 135 Format DF Cheat Sheets which appear below.
When I wrote “use” above – I mean that I know the set of the 18 below numbers by rote: I don’t refer to the “cheat sheets” at all now, because I know the numbers – I just made these cheat sheets as an example learning tool for my students – and I‘ve been happy to share them and also the idea here at CiC.
If you look carefully my numbers, they
form a pattern: that’s because I have rounded them (conservatively rounded for safety).
For the aperture stops in between my set of three: I just average the DoF numbers wither side either side.
As now I shoot mainly with digital media, for APS-C I need only remember the 135 Format Sheet and I simply shift the Apertures one stop (because APS-C Format :: 135 Format “comparative equivalence DoF” is so close to 1⅓ Stops).
One reason for refining my original sheets to only two sets of nine numbers - was that those 18 numbers could be written on the back of a postage stamp (literally) – and for those who remember the spring loaded guide at the back of cameras where one could place the film roll box end – that’s where I kept my original set of 18 DoF numbers – the size of a small postage stamp. Similarly I used to have a set of numbers representing Manual Flash Working Distances and they were taped (postage stamp size) to the back of the Flash Heads.
Having an expansive cheat sheet, for example A4 size might be useful, and I thought it was when I began making mine: but the type of work that I was doing early on in my career, necessitated that any aid be at my eye’s view and rapidly and easily adapted for use whilst I was working under the pressure of time..
It only took me a couple of shoots to realize that I was easy to remember 18 numbers for 135 format and another 18 tor 6x4.5 format, especially if I rounded the numbers to make a pattern. . . and as already mentioned I now only ‘use’ the 18 numbers for 135 Format, represented here:
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Couple of very important points in consideration of the comments in Post #2 and Post #8 –
The major premise for having such a device as a DoF Cheat Sheet is NOT to have to worry about considerations of either:
Focal Length
Shooting Distance
The whole point about the Axiom of Depth of Field is that both Focal Length and Shooting Distance are irrelevant - that’s the beauty of simplicity.
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ADENDUM - perhaps to think about
:
After about a year of using my DoF numbers by memory, I found that I was not consciously remembering the numbers at all, but just setting the aperture automatically – it was that revelation that was the germ of my understanding of the camera becoming an extension of the hand and the hand an extension of the brain and that lead me to the understanding that most of the technical stuff can, with enough focussed practice, become an automatic response – and it was then I began setting about making targeted exercises for my Photography: just like a pianist practices Scales or Hanon exercises.
WW