Roger's Corner

The Cynic’s Photography Dictionary

Published November 22, 2013

Picture –  A representation in two dimensions of something wearisome in three.   Ambrose Bierce

I’m a fan of the satirical and cynical definitions of Ambrose Bierce, first written as a daily newspaper column and later collected in The Devil’s Dictionary. (It was originally called the Cynic’s Word Book, but so many politicians of the day called Bierce a Devil that he felt the new title more appropriate.)

Ambrose Bierce

Unfortunately, very few of Mr. Bierce’s definitions apply to photography. Seeing a need that should be filled, I immediately began working on a Devil’s Dictionary of Photographic terms. Hopefully, some of you will join in and help to expand this desperately needed work.

The Cynic’s Photography Dictionary

Aberration – Something that is wrong with the lens by design, as opposed to something wrong with the lens by accident of assembly or use.

Action photography – The use of very large, expensive lenses to make rapidly moving objects appear immobile.

Aperture — The opening of a lens, identified by a number that gets larger as it gets smaller.

Bokeh – the look of the picture in the parts where you can’t tell what you’re looking at.

Build Quality – How heavy the metal barrel, on the outside of all the important parts of the lens, is. For example, any lens weighing more than 2 pounds has great build quality.

Corner – The edges of an image, generally known for lower image quality.  They begin at the 4 points furthest from the center of the image and, depending upon the equipment and photographer, comprises between 20% and 100% of the image.

Decentered – An image showing very poor quality. This is usually assumed to be caused by the equipment mounted to the front of the camera, but is often actually caused by what is behind the camera. See also, Sample Variation

Depth of Field – The part of an image that is in best focus, traditionally placed just in front of, or just behind, the subject  See also, Autofocus.

Genre – Broad categories of photography such as landscape, action, glamour, wildlife, and portrait, all of which taken together are less common than the most popular genre, the ‘selfie’.

Glamour – A type of photography practiced by many and mastered by few, with the purpose of creating images of creatures not found in nature.

Image Stabilization – a technologic triumph consisting of lenses, magnets, position sensors, springs, and electric motors that is nearly as effective as 3 sticks of wood attached to a base plate. See also, Tripod.

In Spec – Slang term meaning both ‘we can’t make it any better before we go on break’ and ‘you probably can’t tell the difference anyway’.

Lens coating —  thin layers of of substances applied to clear glass that makes it clearer. In the 1600s people were burned at the stake for claiming things like this.

Minimum Focal Distance – How close an object may be to the front of the lens, yet still be in focus. Historically of importance for macro photography, but today used to make certain arm’s-length ‘Selfies’ are in focus.

Phase Detection Autofocus – a method to approximately put the plane of focus somewhere near an object approximately selected by a point in the viewfinder that approximates the location of a dedicated sensor in the camera which is approximately calibrated to the camera’s image sensor. See also, Depth of Field.

Render – from the German ‘Render’. Something an expensive lens is said to do, especially when it doesn’t do anything else exceptionally well.

Sensor – The device that actually takes an image. Its most important attribute is the number of megapixels unless yours has fewer, in which case dynamic range, high ISO performance, microlens effectiveness, color accuracy, and other characteristics are more notable.

Sharpness – The amount of fine detail visible in an image before it is compressed to 1/10th its original size to post online.

Silence – The response of many wives and at least one camera company when an obvious problem arises.

Sample Variation – The difference between this lens and that lens, even though both of them are the same lens.

Stop Down – To move the f-number up.

Technique – The methods that let someone else make pictures I couldn’t afford to buy, using equipment that I would throw away, and vice versa.

Tripod — A stabilizing device with three legs that everyone agrees would improve the sharpness of images taken by others. See also, Image Stabilization.

Vignette — A technique used by lens designers to make the image very dark in the places where the lens is very bad, based on the principle that if things are dark enough you won’t notice how bad they are.

Weather resistant – A term that consumers falsely define as ‘weather proof’ and camera companies accurately define as ‘the warranty doesn’t cover water damage’.

Wedding Photography, n. – A complex form of photography that consists of first of making hysterical people appear calm and joyous, and later making sloppy-drunk people appear pleasantly tipsy. The purpose is to create a beautiful album of images that statistically has a 54% chance of being ripped into little pieces within 5 years.

 

Of course, this list of definitions is incomplete so please add ones I’ve missed as comments. If things go as they usually do with my blog, the comments will end up being far more amusing than the original post.

 

Roger Cicala

Lensrentals.com

November, 2013

“Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum — “I think that I think, therefore I think that I am;”

Ambrose BierceThe Unabridged Devil’s Dictionary

Author: Roger Cicala

I’m Roger and I am the founder of Lensrentals.com. Hailed as one of the optic nerds here, I enjoy shooting collimated light through 30X microscope objectives in my spare time. When I do take real pictures I like using something different: a Medium format, or Pentax K1, or a Sony RX1R.

Posted in Roger's Corner
  • Models – (mostly) female members of the human species which try their best to pose in a way which is impossible for humans. Often photographed with the best or at least impressive equipment, and then post-processed until no hints of real skin are left. See also: hat-stand, coat-stand (tho most often there aren’t many clothes on them)

  • Monochrome

    Sample variation – the difference between this photographer and that photographer. Is often incorrectly applied to equipment.

  • Monochrome

    Shutter – the last line of defense against your next photographic failure.

  • rrwms

    Hyperfocal Distance — neither here nor there.

  • Test Shot – a genre of photography where the objective is to demonstrate using the most mundane subjects that a photograph gets produced. Typically, the lens or camera being ‘tested’ is placed back in the cupboard to wait for the next test shoot. If film is used, it usually is ‘cheap’ or ‘expired’.

    Film Photography – an antiquated sensor technology, where the typical enthusiast competes to use the worst equipment with the most expired film, strange developing techniques, and the least amount of dust spotting.

  • KenS

    I’m a sucker for Ambrose, but it’s important to get the mocking tone right. Here’s my attempt:

    auto white balance – processing performed by a camera to ensure that attractively lit morning or afternoon landscapes look like they were photographed at noon

    composition – the skill of finding something to point a camera at

    creative effect – a substitute for creative effort

    Flickr – the appearance of a sequence of images projected on a screen too slowly to blur together

    HDR (Hardly Done Right) – a method of combining multiple images to make a result less accurate then any of the originals.

    histogram – a graphic representation of the camera’s or photographer’s ability to set the exposure

    photography, architectural – the art of pointing a camera in front of you when a building is present

    photography, landscape – the art of pointing a camera in front of you when a building is not present

    photography, portrait – the art of pointing a camera in front of you when a person is present

    unmodified – adj., applies to an image produced from sensor data by arbitrary processing, as opposed to an image produced by deliberate processing intended to create a representation of the original.

    UV filter – a $5 glass element placed on the front of a lens costing ten to one thousand times as much to improve its performance.

  • DxOMark – 1. A website for conveniently reducing complex pieces of photographic equipment to a single number for the purposes of making meaningless comparisons. 2. The Internet’s greatest ever gift to Fanboys.

  • Wide angle prime DX lens – an elusive dream. See unicorns and Santa Claus.

  • Burst mode – a convenient method for filling a memory card with many almost identical images.

  • John Ewing

    Aberration: According to the photographer, something wrong with the lens. A classic case of pot calling kettle.

    Lens coating: what happens when a lens gets too close to a happy Labrador.

  • P@L

    I couldn’t stop laughing when faced with … silence

  • Jeff

    Rule of Thirds: A guide used to position a subject in the frame other than dead center and preferable to no subject at all.

  • CarVac

    Handgrip: A decorative design element present on many cameras that the average camera user disregards entirely.

  • Siming

    Pop up flash: A magical device that instantly turns people into ghosts. Recommended use: Halloween.

  • Edward Jenner

    Hyperfocal distance. The distance to focus on to get everything important in your image soft.

    Diffraction. Physical phenomena used to excuse any soft landscape image.

    Magic Lantern. Incredible software that causes extreme panic anytime your camera does something you don’t expect it to – usually user error like locking the remote trigger shutter release in the ‘on’ position.

    Fisheye lens – specialty lens that seemed like a good idea just long enough for you to buy one.

    Natural light – term used when taking indoor photos by people who don’t know how to use flash.

    Golden hour – the two times of the day when landscape photographer have a good excuse to ditch the family and get some alone time with a good beer while on vacation.

    UV/protection filter – a triumph of marketing over common sense.

    Rules of composition – a set of reasons to easily describe, in a polite way, why someone’s photograph sucks.

    Instagram – a set of filters or actions regarded with complete disdain by the photographic community because they are not available as Photoshop plug-ins.

  • inohuri

    Stopping down is for lenses.
    Stopping up is for noses.

    Both describe obstruction.

    2. To constrict (an opening or orifice): My nose is stopped up.

    http://www.thefreedictionary.com/stopping+up

  • intrnst

    Silence is golden.

  • Jose

    Stop: (1) versatile photograhpical unit that measures time, aperture or sensor (film) sensitivity, separately or sometimes combined. See Equivalence. (2) The last word the photographer might hear from his wife before buying new equipment. It is usually followed by Silence.

    Equivalence: Mathematical formula that allows the photographer to theoretically understand the relationships between the camera’s sensor size, lens’ focal length and aperture, and photographer’s manhood. The equivalence definition is needed after the comment “My sensor is bigger than yours”.

  • Mike “Busted Knuckles” Barrett

    Stop Down – To move the f-number up. Please remove “number “

  • Siegfried

    Roger,
    I just used GEEK and /GEEK html tags (yep, with those angle brackets) to italicize the MFD remark, but they appear to be rejected and lost while processing. No geek tags on your geek blog?!

    Zig

  • Siegfried

    Web photo-forum:
    – an online (see Internet) combined IQ/brand-loyalty test site.

    (Photo-camera) Shoulder Strap:
    – a mobile advertisement site/area one has to buy to advertize products he buys.

    Oh, Roger!
    Minimum Focus(-ing) Distance, not Minimal _Focal_ Distance

    Zig

  • UV Filter – Cheap piece of glass camera stores sell for outrageous prices, that when properly installed reduces the sharpness of the tack sharp lens you just spent $2,500 for.

  • Ben

    Let’s see if I’m any good at this…

    Bokeh – the most important are of the photograph. ‘Good’ bokeh makes even the most hideous of subjects into a great photograph.

    In focus area – the area of the photograph which detracts from the bokeh.

    Instagram – a technique applied to many photographs in order to turn mundane photographs into works of art the whole world must see.

    UV Filter – an object placed on lenses to show whether the photographer intends to drop, bash into things with, or otherwise damage a lens or not.

  • Mel Auer

    You left out “Autocofus” (sp)

    Autocofus – A sophisticated technology whereby the camera attempts to relieve the photographer of the burden of calculating the distance between the sensor and the subject, at times successfully. See also: tape measure.

  • KyleSTL

    Conspiuously absent with so many possibilities – hyperfocal distance. Also loved the silence definition. I believe the proper reaction to ‘at least one camera company’ is … “OOOOHHHH” (with mouth covered by hand). Burned

  • Hi,

    Any way to share a link to this? Great stuff!

    Best regards
    Erik

  • Depth Of Field Preview Button – The digital equivalent of an aperture ring

  • Lens cap – a plastic disc used to cover & protect the external glass element of a lens. Only ever in place to protect the lens while inside of a lined, padded, protective case; never in place during actual use when the lens is being swung about, bashed, dropped, etc. Only problem is, if it were in place whilst the lens is in use then you would only ever be taking one picture over and over and it would be solid black…this however would greatly lessen the need to learn anything at all about aperature, shutter speed, and ISO.

  • Mike

    Viewfinder – Unlike those silly mirrorless cameras, this allows you to see the image exactly how the sensor will see it. Well, 95% of it at least. And with the wrong aperture.

  • Mike

    ND filter – After spending an extra $2000 for the lens that lets in more light, add this filter to drastically reduce the amount of light that gets in.

Follow on Feedly