APERTURE CHEAT SHEET

PVME Training Division — quick reference

Full-stop f-stop sequence

Each step doubles or halves the light. Memorize this — every aperture decision lives on this ladder.

f/1.4 — f/2 — f/2.8 — f/4 — f/5.6 — f/8 — f/11 — f/16 — f/22

Rule of thumb: Lower f-number = wider opening = more light + shallower depth of field. Higher f-number = smaller opening = less light + deeper depth of field.

Depth of field by f-stop

F-stopDOF characterTypical PVME use
f/1.4 – f/2Razor thin, dreamyRomantic bridal portraits, low-light reception candids
f/2.8Shallow, eye-only focusEngagement sessions, environmental headshots
f/4Subject sharp, background softCouples, small groups, full-length portraits
f/5.6 – f/8Workhorse zoneStudio headshots, groups of 3–8, military formations close-in
f/8 – f/11Deep, near-to-far sharpReal estate interiors, large formations, product
f/13 – f/16Maximum DOF, diffraction riskReal estate exteriors, landscape, sun stars
f/22Diffraction territoryAvoid unless forcing long exposure

PVME starting f-stops

ScenarioStart atLens of choice
Studio headshot (tethered, single subject)f/8Sony 85mm GM or 70-200 GM at 135mm
Corporate headshot — torso, white seamlessf/7.185mm GM
Military trainee headshotf/870-200 GM at 100mm
Military formation (50+ people)f/1124-70 GM at 35–50mm
Wedding ceremony — widef/424-70 GM
Wedding portraits — bride alonef/2 – f/2.885mm GM
Wedding family groups (4–10)f/5.624-70 GM
Reception candids, low lightf/1.8 – f/2.235mm or 50mm prime
Real estate interiorf/816-35 GM at 20mm
Real estate twilight exteriorf/1116-35 GM

5 common aperture mistakes

  1. Shooting f/1.4 on group portraits — only one face will be sharp. Stop down to f/4 or smaller for couples, f/5.6+ for 3+ people.
  2. Cranking to f/22 for "more sharpness" — diffraction softens the entire image past f/11 on most full-frame bodies. Use ND filters instead.
  3. Wide-open headshots without confirming eye AF lock — at f/1.4 the focus plane is thinner than an eyelash. Always verify on the tether monitor.
  4. Forgetting aperture controls flash output — at f/8 your strobes may need 2 stops more power than at f/4. Re-meter when you change f-stops in studio.
  5. Using f/2.8 zooms wide open for real estate — interiors need depth, not bokeh. Stop down to f/8 minimum.

Quick decision tree