View Full Version : Bokeh on the HD100 Fujinon lens?


Warner Brown
January 22nd, 2013, 02:30 PM
Hi guys, I'm selling my Fujinon Th16x5.5BRMU lens on ebay, and someone is interested.
His question is:

"Does the lens have any bokeh, especially for medium to close shots of people?
I am especially interested for doing interviews."

Any answer so I can answer him is much appreciated!
thanks

Warner

Nate Haustein
January 22nd, 2013, 09:16 PM
I mean, point him to any HD100 footage on YouTube and try to spot some. Maybe the background lights will look kinda pretty and blurry, but if your buyer is looking for something 50mm on a 5D-esque.... not going to happen.

JVC GYHD-110U Comprehensive High Definition Test (HD) - YouTube

Sareesh Sudhakaran
January 23rd, 2013, 06:07 AM
At medium to telephoto widen open the bokeh is pretty good, at least I liked it when I tried. The problem is, most of the time you're shooting at the wider end, since the lens isn't very wide anyway.

Shaun Roemich
January 23rd, 2013, 01:58 PM
The word "bokeh" doesn't speak to the AMOUNT of background blur... it speaks to the AESTHETICS.

Bokeh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bokeh)

Given the chromatic aberration of the lens (I own two...), I would suggest the BOKEH is rubbish, despite the lens being quite functional, ESPECIALLY at the price point it was created for.

And as Nate points out, it is a 1/3" lens... FF35 like qualities aren't going to happen, even though you can force a BG nicely out of focus IF you know a thing or two about lens physics...

John Vincent
January 28th, 2013, 10:31 PM
I'd disagree with that a bit - it must by definition include the amount of out of focus area - after all, if there is little to no background blurriness, then there's no "quality" either. Semantics aside, I think the

Semantics aside, I shot an entire feature movie with that lens and the only bokeh achieved was during a bright sunny day and shooting across a field. It certainly isn't an easy effect to achieve with this lens/camera and very tough in low light.

As for the aesthetic quality, I'd say it's nice but not dreamy-creamy.

The first scene the flick features the bokeh I'm speaking of - it's a $1.99, but it's the only way I can show it legally:

Amazon.com: Vampireland: Michael Bugard, Eric Maurer, Eric Jaan, Misty Mills: Amazon Instant Video