How do you count “two stops down” on a variable-aperture zoom lens?

Asked 7/2/2011

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People often say a lens gives its best image quality when stopped down about two stops from its widest aperture. I understand this is only a rule of thumb, but I’m confused about what aperture to count from on a zoom lens with a variable maximum aperture.

For example, with an 18–55mm f/3.5–5.6 lens, should I count from f/5.6 for the whole zoom range, or from the maximum aperture available at the focal length I’m actually using?

So at 18mm, where the lens can open to f/3.5, would “two stops down” be around f/5.6, while at 55mm, where the widest aperture is f/5.6, would it be around f/8?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

15y ago

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Real fastest value at the exact focal length.

But, this is just a rule of thumb — it's not necessarily exactly two stops in every case.

For the question of what two stops mean, see What does f-stop mean?. In short, each stop is approximately the-square-root-of-two times the previous one. That means half the light is allowed in (which is why the seemingly-weird series of numbers was chosen). Two stops is doing that twice, which conveniently works out to simply being doubling. Two stops from f/2 is f/4, and and two stops from that is f/8. Or, starting at f/1.8, two stops is f/3.6.

The test results comparison tool used by Digital Photography Review is interesting for looking at this. Try this test of Pentax's 18-55mm zoom, which like most kit zooms goes from f/3.5 at the short end to f/5.6 zoomed out.

You can see that at 18mm, the sharpness improves as you go from f/3.5 to f/4 to f/5.6. At f/8, it's more even from center to corners, but doesn't get any sharper. And beyond that, it drops off.

Then, change the focal length to 55mm. You'll notice that with this lens, overall sharpness goes down from 18mm at f/5.6. At f/8, it picks up a little bit, and a little more at f/11, and then back down again at f/16.

So, that fits with the two-stops guideline pretty well. Same for the Canon kit lens, and Nikon too.

With the Pentax DA 15mm f/4 Limited test, they've got test results in third-stops, and there you can see that f/7.1 is no better than f/6.3, and f/8 is worse — so that's only 1⅓ stops. On the other hand the DA★ 55mm f/1.4 shows peak sharpness at f/4.5 — closed down by 3⅓ stops. This doesn't reflect a problem with the lens, just different priorities in design. The Nikon 50mm f/1.4G is similar, with peak sharpness at 3⅔ or 4 stops down. However, the entry level Nikkor f/1.8G fits the "two stops" guide quite well, peaking at around f/3.5.

It's also worth noting that this test is primarily concerned with sharpness, because that's easy to measure. Other image quality and rendering characteristics are also affected. Vignetting (light falloff in the corners) gets better the more you stop down, and it's usually gone after two stops. And bokeh quality is usually improved by stopping down, too — generally, lens bokeh is nicer/smoother stopped down a bit, but of course it's less visible since you have greater depth of field. Plus, shape of the aperture blades will become visible in specular highlights, which is a side-effect unrelated to stopping down per se — some modern lenses have rounded aperture blades to make that not be a concern.

Originally by user1943. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user1943

15y ago

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AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

Count from the widest aperture available at the focal length you’re actually using.

So on a variable-aperture 18–55mm f/3.5–5.6 zoom:

  • at 18mm, the starting point is f/3.5
  • at 55mm, the starting point is f/5.6

That means the “best stopped down” point is not one fixed aperture across the whole zoom range. It changes with focal length. In your example, it would be roughly around f/5.6 at the wide end and around f/8 at the long end.

Also, “two stops” means two full aperture steps. Each full stop halves the light, and the standard sequence is approximately: f/1.4, f/2, f/2.8, f/4, f/5.6, f/8, ...

So two stops down from f/2 is f/4, from f/2.8 is f/5.6, and from f/5.6 is f/11. From f/1.8, two exact stops is about f/3.6, though cameras usually round to nearby standard values.

Finally, this is only a rule of thumb: the sharpest aperture varies by lens and focal length, not always exactly two stops down.

UniqueBot

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15y ago

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