Yes it is. Look at it this way, if you set a 50mm at f/2.0 it has a 25mm 
opening, now if you set a 100mm at f/2.0 it has a 50mm opening, but at 
f/4.0 it has the same 25mm opening that the 50mm does at f/2.0. So, if 
the magnification of your viewing image (print) is the same (which Bill 
took care of by slightly enlarging his 70mm image) then the DOF will be 
the same. (Note that you can control the magnification by changing 
distance also, but that will change the perspective of the image.)

Sounds pretty complicated, but it is not actually.  These are some of 
the controls you have over your images, at the camera. And in actual use 
it soon becomes pretty much unconscious. In the mean time you can cut 
and paste the following and print it on a 3x5 card to keep in your 
camera bag.

1) Magnification and aperture diameter control DOF
2) Focal length, subject distance, enlargement factor, etc. control 
magnification. Note, how many things affect magnification.
3) Distance controls perspective.
4) F-stop and shutter speed control exposure.
5) Shutter speed controls motion blur.
6) ISO adjusts for light level.

NOTE: There are many interdependencies there, in other words, changing 
one thing also changes others.

-graywolf


[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> In a message dated 4/29/2007 7:36:03 A.M.  Pacific Daylight Time, 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> ----- Original Message -----  
> From: "graywolf" 
> Subject: Re: M85mm f2.0 bokeh
> 
> 
>> Most  folks do confuse f-stop with aperture, I sure used to. However, 
>> they  are not the same thing. So you are mistaken here (I have not looked 
>> at  the Wikipedia article to see if it is correct or not).
>>
>> I am not  going to go through all this again, folks, look in the 
>> archives; or  better yet, get the formulas and calculate DOF using f-stop 
>> and  aperture diameter, go out and shot some photos and compare them with 
>>  your calculations. Then, like me, you will never make that mistake  again.
> 
> =========
> Huh. Haven't been paying much attention to this  thread. 
> 
> But I would presume while the diameter of an aperture opening  could be set 
> the same from lens to lens if one fiddled around, a f stop is  dependent on 
> the 
> focal length of the lens. So a f/8 on a 16mm and a f/8 on a  200mm say, would 
> actually have a different size of aperture opening if one  measured the 
> diameter.
> 
> Is that what you are talking about?  
> 
> Thanks.
> 
> Marnie aka Doe :-)  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
> 

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