Engineering:Smooth Trans Focus

From HandWiki
Smoth Trans Focus with bokeh discs

The Smooth Trans Focus (STF) technology in photographic lenses uses an apodization filter to realize notably smooth bokeh with rounded out-of-focus highlights in both the foreground and background. This is accomplished by utilizing a concave neutral-gray tinted lens element next to the aperture blades as apodization filter, a technology originally invented (and patented) by Minolta in the 1980s, and first implemented in a commercially available lens in 1999. In contrast to soft focus lenses, STF lenses render a perfectly sharp image in the focus plane.

Lenses featuring Smooth Trans Focus technology:

  • Minolta STF 135mm F2.8 [T4.5] (introduced 1999)
  • Sony α STF 135mm F2.8 [T4.5] (SAL-135F28) (introduced 2006)
  • Sony FE 100mm F2.8 STF GM OSS (SEL-100F28GM) (introduced 2017)[1]

See also

  • STF function (an emulation of the effect in the Minolta Maxxum 7)
  • Fujinon XF 56mm F1.2 R APD (a similar lens introduced by Fujifilm in 2014)
  • Venus Optics Laowa 105mm f/2 Smooth Trans Focus (a similar lens introduced by Venus Optics in 2016)
  • f-stop
  • T-stop

References