Professional DoF Calculator
35
f/1.8
2.0
m
Near Limit: 1.78 m
Far Limit: 2.26 m
Total DoF: 0.48 m
Hyperfocal: 12.34 m
Aperture Shape Preview
Depth of Field Calculator Tutorial
What This Tool Does
This calculator shows you the range of sharpness (Depth of Field, or DoF) in your photos/videos based on:
- Camera sensor size
- Lens focal length
- Aperture (f-stop or T-stop)
- Focus distance
How to Use It
1. Select Your Camera/Sensor
- Choose your camera model from the dropdown.
- Pro Tip: Smaller sensors (e.g., Micro Four Thirds) have deeper DoF than full-frame at the same settings.
2. Adjust Lens Settings
- Focal Length (mm): Slide to match your lens (e.g., 24mm for wide-angle, 85mm for portraits).
- Aperture: Lower f-numbers (e.g., f/1.8) give shallow DoF (blurry backgrounds), while higher f-numbers (e.g., f/16) keep more in focus.
- Toggle between f-stop (photo lenses) and T-stop (cine lenses, accounts for light loss).
3. Set Your Focus Distance
- Drag the slider to match how far your subject is from the camera.
- Pro Tip: Focus beyond the hyperfocal distance (shown in results) to maximize sharpness from foreground to infinity.
4. Read the Results
- Near Limit: Closest distance that’s acceptably sharp.
- Far Limit: Farthest distance that’s sharp (8 means everything beyond is in focus).
- Total DoF: The total range of sharpness (e.g., “0.5m” means 50cm between near/far limits).
Understanding the Graphic
- Blue Zone: The depth of field (sharp area).
- Orange Line: Your exact focus point.
- Why are they close? With shallow DoF (wide apertures), the sharp zone is narrow, so the focus point appears near the near limit.
Practical Examples
1. Portrait (Shallow DoF)
- Settings: 85mm, f/1.8, focus at 2m
- Result: Very narrow blue zone ? blurred background
2. Landscape (Deep DoF)
- Settings: 24mm, f/11, focus at 5m
- Result: Wide blue zone ? everything from 1m to 8 is sharp
3. Hyperfocal Magic
- Settings: 35mm, f/8, focus at ~7m (hyperfocal distance)
- Result: Sharp from 3.5m to 8
Pro Tips
- Bokeh Simulator: Shows how aperture shape affects out-of-focus highlights (more blades = rounder bokeh).
- Unit Toggle: Switch between meters/feet for distance.
- Mobile-Friendly: Works on phones/tablets for on-set use.
Why It Matters
Mastering DoF helps you:
- ? Isolate subjects with creamy bokeh
- ? Keep entire scenes sharp (landscapes, architecture)
- ? Nail focus for video (e.g., pull focus between near/far limits)