
One major difference between the eye and the senses of your camera lens is that the eye has a depth of field (DOF) is almost without limit while the lens is limited, this brings the consequence that the focal plane is not an area of the eye lens. And former photographer has decided to actually take advantage of this weakness into a weapon. Thus was born what was then called bokeh.
Original Bokeh is a Japanese word meaning ‘blurred’, so is the bokeh photograph photographs that highlight the characteristics of a oyek main focus is very sharp while the background (or foreground) is very vague, or in English selective focusing. In the example above the beautiful photos (the work of Sector Two), the main object model face is very sharp, but the background is the door to look very blurry (motion blur). Well, nature is called bokeh blurred. How can so that we can produce bokeh like this photo. Here you can do:

1. Choose manual mode or Aperture Priority – read more about the camera operation mode here
2. Select an aperture setting as possible. View the f / x on your lens, the smaller x, the larger the aperture and the narrower field of focus
3. Think about the distance factor, namely the distance in front of and behind the object field. Suppose you stand one meter in front of friends (front distance = 1 meter) and you drop the lens focal point on the face. Your friend was standing about 10 meters from the nearest background (rear distance = 10 meters), then the background will look very blurry. In essence, the smaller the distance the front (the distance between the lens and the object) and the greater the distance the rear (the distance between object and background) you backgorund increasingly blurred.
4. Many practicing and you try to buy a lens with aperture capability as possible.
Tip: If you do like the bokeh, non-zoom lens with super-large aperture is the quickest way of getting bokeh (eg: 85mm f/1.8 & 50mm f/1.8, this lens is the lens of two super fast and super cheap also producing exceptional bokeh )
