Does anyone know what the cheapest FF DSLR is at the moment?
I just bought a Canon 350D and getting frustrated with the 1.6x crop factor. Can't get the DOF I want at the distance I want. A 50mm lens turns into a 80mm lens, which means I have to move further back from the subject, and hence get more DOF when what I want is less, tighter DOF.
Anyone who's used to FF 35mm SLRs will know what I'm talking about.
It's very frustrating!
The funny thing is, I've read in many forum posts that many young photogs of the DSLR generation seems to think that the smaller sensor size gives "more DOF, so that the background is more blurry"... this is a contradiction and completely wrong:
a.) If the "background is more blurry", thats LESS DOF, not MORE. (gosh.) The less the DOF, the less is in focus.
b.) Smaller sensor size results in more things being in focus. Larger sensor size results in less things being in focus, i.e. less DOF.
I'm into taking headshots, and used to be able to take headshots with the back of the hair/head out of focus, whilst the front of the head (eyes, face..etc) are in focus. I managed to do this without getting a fish-eye effect through being too close to the subject. And I managed to get the whole head and shoulders in the shot. With a FF 35mm camera.
Now that we have these blasted 1.6x DSLR things I can't even manage the above anymore, yet everywhere I go I find people raving about how great the crop factor is and how it enhances the range of lenses. Who wants to crop a 50mm into an 80mm lens when you can crop it on the PC if you wanted to anyway (as long as you have enough res in the pic which you should with today's DSLR specs), or go out any buy a freaking 80mm lens in the first place? Whats frustrating is you can't turn an 80mm lens into a 50mm lens, regardless of what post-production software you have. So really, these smaller sensors are nothing but limiting.
Am I the only person who thinks this way?
Sorry for the long moan. I hadn't intended this post to turn into this! I probably sound like an old man. I'm actually 27, I just started photography at a very young age and finally turned to digital recently.
I got this 350D thinking heck this is a bargain, I can continue my professional headshot work with this thing, but now after testing it out, I think I'm going to have to shell out on a 5D. The smaller sensor of the 350D is too creatively limiting.
:thumbsdown:
I just bought a Canon 350D and getting frustrated with the 1.6x crop factor. Can't get the DOF I want at the distance I want. A 50mm lens turns into a 80mm lens, which means I have to move further back from the subject, and hence get more DOF when what I want is less, tighter DOF.
Anyone who's used to FF 35mm SLRs will know what I'm talking about.
It's very frustrating!
The funny thing is, I've read in many forum posts that many young photogs of the DSLR generation seems to think that the smaller sensor size gives "more DOF, so that the background is more blurry"... this is a contradiction and completely wrong:
a.) If the "background is more blurry", thats LESS DOF, not MORE. (gosh.) The less the DOF, the less is in focus.
b.) Smaller sensor size results in more things being in focus. Larger sensor size results in less things being in focus, i.e. less DOF.
I'm into taking headshots, and used to be able to take headshots with the back of the hair/head out of focus, whilst the front of the head (eyes, face..etc) are in focus. I managed to do this without getting a fish-eye effect through being too close to the subject. And I managed to get the whole head and shoulders in the shot. With a FF 35mm camera.
Now that we have these blasted 1.6x DSLR things I can't even manage the above anymore, yet everywhere I go I find people raving about how great the crop factor is and how it enhances the range of lenses. Who wants to crop a 50mm into an 80mm lens when you can crop it on the PC if you wanted to anyway (as long as you have enough res in the pic which you should with today's DSLR specs), or go out any buy a freaking 80mm lens in the first place? Whats frustrating is you can't turn an 80mm lens into a 50mm lens, regardless of what post-production software you have. So really, these smaller sensors are nothing but limiting.
Am I the only person who thinks this way?
Sorry for the long moan. I hadn't intended this post to turn into this! I probably sound like an old man. I'm actually 27, I just started photography at a very young age and finally turned to digital recently.
I got this 350D thinking heck this is a bargain, I can continue my professional headshot work with this thing, but now after testing it out, I think I'm going to have to shell out on a 5D. The smaller sensor of the 350D is too creatively limiting.
:thumbsdown:
will set you back about £1300 and canon are offering £150 cashback at the mo