stop down

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

stop down (third-person singular simple present stops down, present participle stopping down, simple past and past participle stopped down)

  1. (photography) To decrease the aperture of a photographic lens, moving from an f/stop represented by a lower number to an f/stop represented by a higher number.
    • 1982, Marvin J. Rosen, Introduction to photography: a self-directing approach, 2nd edition, →ISBN, page 71:
      The f/stops are arranged so that as you stop down, each stop allows half the amount of light to pass through as the stop before it did.
    • 2002 December 12, “Images from a blurred world”, in The Economist, retrieved 3 April 2009:
      To get an image with a larger “depth of field”—ie, where more of the distant objects as well as the nearer ones in a scene are in focus—the photographer must “stop down” the aperture of the lens, restricting the amount of light admitted.

Antonyms[edit]