Dictionary Definition
telephoto n : a photograph made with a telephoto
lens [syn: telephotograph]
User Contributed Dictionary
Adjective
telephotoNoun
- A photograph taken through a telephoto lens.
Extensive Definition
If a camera lens were to be
constructed from a single lens of 200 mm focal length, then when
the lens is focused on an object at infinity, the lens will be 200
mm away from the focal plane where the film or sensor is. The
center of the lens is referred to as the optical center of the
lens. Even constructing the lens out of multiple elements in the
regular fashion, usually to eliminate
aberrations, will still have the optical center within the
construction.
As the focal length of such lenses increases, the
physical length of lens becomes inconveniently long. But such
lenses are not telephoto lenses, no matter how extreme the focal
length. They are simply known as long focal length lenses.
The diagram to the right shows the basic
construction of a telephoto lens. It consists of front lens
elements that, as a group, have a positive focus. The focal length
of this group is shorter than the effective focal length of the
lens. The converging rays from this group are intercepted by the
rear lens group, sometimes called the "telephoto group," which has
a negative focus. The simplest telephoto designs could consist of
one element in each group, but in practice, more than one element
is used in each group to correct for various aberrations. The
combination of these two groups produces a lens assembly that is
physically shorter than a long focus lens producing the same image
size.
This same property is achieved with mirrors
combined with lenses in catadioptric designs. The
mirrors in such designs fold the light path and the curved
secondary extends the light cone, making the lens much shorter than
the focal length even given the folded design. However, lenses
incorporating mirrors are not necessarily of telephoto
design.
Compare with the opposite effect used in retrofocus
lenses, sometimes described as inverted telephotos, which have
greater clearance from the rear element to the film plane than
their focal length would permit with a conventional wide-angle
lens optical design. Zoom lenses
that are telephotos at one extreme of the zoom range and retrofocus
at the other are now common.
The heaviest telephoto lens was made by Carl Zeiss and
has a focal length of 1700 mm with a maximum aperture of , implying a 425 mm
(16.7 inch) entrance
pupil. It is designed for use with a medium
format Hasselblad 203
FE camera and weighs 256 kg (564 lb).
Effects
Telephoto and other long-focal-length lenses are
best known for making distant objects appear magnified. This effect is
similar to moving closer to the object, but is not the same, since
perspective
is a function solely of viewing location. Two images taken from the
same location, one with a wide angle
lens and the other with a telephoto lens, will show identical
perspective, in that near and far objects appear the same relative
size to each other. Comparing magnification by using a long lens to
magnification by moving closer, however, the telephoto shot appears
to compress the distance between objects due to the perspective
from the more distant location. Long lenses thus give a
photographer an alternative to the type of
perspective distortion exhibited by shorter focal length lenses
where (when the photographer stands closer to the given subject)
different portions of a subject in a photograph can appear out of
proportion to each other.
Long lenses also make it easier to blur the
background more, even when the depth of field is the same;
photographers will sometimes use this effect to defocus the
background in an image to "separate" it from the subject.
Still photography
Effect of different focal lengths on photographs taken from the same place:The above photos were taken using a 35 mm camera,
using lenses of the given focal
lengths.
Constant object size
The photographer often moves to keep the same
image size on the film for a particular object. Observe in the
comparison images below that although the foreground object remains
the same size, the background changes size; thus, perspective is
dependent on the distance between the photographer and the subject.
The longer focus lenses compress the perception of depth, and the
shorter focus exaggerate it. The perspective of the so-called
normal lens, 50mm focal length for 35 mm film format, is
conventionally regarded as a "correct" perspective, though a longer
lens is usually preferred for a more correct perspective for
portraits.
History
The concept of the telephoto lens, in reflecting
form, was first described by Johannes
Kepler in his Dioptrice of 1611
http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC02234890&id=0pYAAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA117&lpg=PA117&dq=intitle:photography+Waterhouse&as_brr=1#PPA117,M1,
and re-invented by Peter Barlow
in 1834.
http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN3540401067&id=_FPrke6p19AC&pg=PA5&lpg=PA5&ots=AXm1MSWozG&dq=dallmeyer+telephoto+invented&sig=G0gNd0a2JyHUKQ9u-Nk7kUs8X3w
Histories of photography usually credit Thomas
Rudolphus Dallmeyer with the invention of the photographic
telephoto lens in 1891, though it was independently invented by
others about the same time; some credit his father John
Henry Dallmeyer in 1860.
http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0312313675&id=zqkdNwRxSooC&pg=PA109&lpg=PA109&ots=oxbAda_x5B&dq=dallmeyer+telephoto+invented&sig=s5le-TuAO_ogMHLza-V3jrTpRwM
See also
References
External links
telephoto in Catalan: Teleobjectiu
telephoto in Danish: Teleobjektiv
telephoto in German: Teleobjektiv
telephoto in Spanish: Teleobjetivo
telephoto in Esperanto: Teleobjektivo
telephoto in French: Objectif de longue
focale
telephoto in Italian: Teleobiettivo
telephoto in Dutch: Teleobjectief
telephoto in Japanese: 望遠レンズ
telephoto in Polish: Teleobiektyw
telephoto in Russian: Телеобъектив
telephoto in Swedish: Teleobjektiv
telephoto in Chinese: 遠攝鏡頭
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Photoradiogram, Wirephoto, aerial photograph,
black-and-white photograph, candid photograph, cheesecake, chronophotograph, color
photograph, color print, diapositive, facsimile, heliochrome, heliograph, montage, mug, mug shot, photo, photobiography, photochronograph,
photograph, photomap, photomicrograph,
photomontage,
photomural, picture, pinup, portrait, radiophotograph,
shot, slide, snap, snapshot, still, still photograph, telephotograph, transparency