Richard King
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It's about the subtlety in skin tonality you can get with natural light
It's about the subtlety in skin tonality you can get with natural light
Bzzt... nope.I find all these arguments amusing. DOF is no better or worse on any camera back. It is just that the "equivalent focal length" changes
You can get amazing DOF with a 400MM on a crop at the right distance
There is an article here that explains it, the comments are interesting too
http://www.have-camera-will-travel.com/field_reports/full_frame_vs_crop_sensor_-.html
arad85 said:The smaller the sensor, the more you have to enlarge it (the image captured on the sensor) for a given print size, the shallower the DoF.
And focal length and image size, yes. Wiki sums it up:I'm no expert on this but this doesn't sound right.
So is this saying the smaller the sensor, the shallower the depth of field for the same f number and distance?
Wikipedia said:If pictures are taken from the same distance using the same lens and f-number, and the final images are the same size, the original image (that recorded on the film or electronic sensor) from the smaller format requires greater enlargement for the same size final image, and the smaller format has less DOF.
Bzzt... nope.
If you look at the posted images, the crop sensor has a shallower DoF (by about 25-30%). The crop appears to be critically sharp from just after 19" to just before 21", the FF appears to be critically sharp from around 18.5" to 21" or just after.
This is exactly as theory tells us - same lens, same distance, same F number and the crop camera has shallower DoF for a given picture size. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth_of_field#DOF_vs._format_size
What nearly everyone misses out is that DoF is only apparent when you render the image. The smaller the sensor, the more you have to enlarge it (the image captured on the sensor) for a given print size, the shallower the DoF. Change the distance, F number, lens etc... and the calculations change. But this final stage is where DoF is actually rendered - not in the image capture.....
Do full frame not generally have slightly higher colour depth and would this be of any importance with the quality in comparison?
Yes, but then you are changing the magnification and the depth of field will change accordingly.If you pop both the images, next to eachother in photoshop, and scale them so the ruler is the same width, they look near as damit the same
wiki said:If the larger format is cropped to the captured area of the smaller format, the final images will have the same angle of view, have been given the same enlargement, and have the same DOF.
Yes, but then you are changing the magnification and the depth of field will change accordingly.
Again taken from wiki:
In fact this just 15 words further on from the previous sentence I quoted and is equivalent to scaling the image up so the ruler is the same width (cropping and printing bigger).
Once you think of only a single distance being in focus and everything else being out of focus to a greater or lesser extent, it becomes obvious that the bigger you print an image (i.e. more magnification), the less DoF it will have as you zoom in more and can see the "out-of-focusness" more.
The key thing which most people miss is that DoF is ONLY relevant when you render the image - either on screen or in a print. DoF calculators make some assumptions about how big you are printing and how far away you are viewing, and if you break those assumptions, the perceived DoF will change.
What lenses do you use?
this!The viewfinder alone is worth it for me. Switching between a crop and FX regulary, the difference is night and day. I really struggle to see though a cropper viewfinder.
....the viewfinder on a crop is terrible and cant manually focus on it!......
That's a pretty sweeping statement - yes, full-frame viewfinders are bigger and generally clearer than on croppers but my D2x is truly fantastic for manual focus... 100 per cent coverage, very bright, great focussing screen, more info than you can shake a stick at.
Anything EF works on both full frame & crop. Anything EF-S only works on crop. The 3 lenses you mention are all EF so will work on both.Is it the same with Canon or do all their lenses work on FF.
Anything EF works on both full frame & crop. Anything EF-S only works on crop. The 3 lenses you mention are all EF so will work on both.
I've seen the comments regarding the lack of versatility of the Nikon lenses (DX v FX?) I had been considering the Nikon FFs due to faster fps capabilities but am wary if there's a smaller choice of lenses.
I use a 1970's 105mm macro lens on the D700 that I picked up for £70 and it is utterly superb!
Nikon haven't changed their mount design since the 50's so you can physically mount more or less any Nikon lens on any nikon body. It's quite nice having a 60 year back catalogue to dip into. You have to be a little careful as some of the lower end DSLR's will throw a fit if the lens is non CPU but all of the FX bodies and pro DX bodies can use any lens. I use a 1970's 105mm macro lens on the D700 that I picked up for £70 and it is utterly superb!
85mm 1.8. Or 17-40L if you prefer wider angles.I will be left with my 50 1.8, however what single lens should I go for?
Mr G said:Viewfinder
For me, perhaps my favorite full frame advantage is the quality of the camera’s viewfinder. If you have ever used an older film SLR, you might have been impressed by the size and clarity of the viewfinder. Indeed, one of the shortcomings of crop factor DSLR’s is the relatively small viewfinder. Full frame cameras overcome this greatly.
Now that I have a full frame camera, using a crop factor camera’s viewfinder can feel a bit like staring down a tunnel. If you’ve never had the pleasure of checking out a full frame viewfinder, try to get hands on one. It makes it much easier to manually focus a lens and make sure that your shot is in perfect focus compared to a crop factor counterpart.
Focal Length
The 24mm f/1.4 lens. On a crop factor camera, the effective focal length of this lens is around 36mm. To view the flipside, you would be required to find a 16mm lens for crop factor; a 16mm f/1.4 prime doesn’t even exist. In short, fast wide lenses are much easier to come by on full frame.
High ISO
If there’s one performance factor that I really appreciate from a full frame camera, it’s the advantage in high ISO shooting. The larger sensor benefits from a technical advantage. In the most basic technical terms, the larger sensor allows the manufacturers to not cram the photosites onto the sensor, and the camera benefits in high ISO performance because of this.
well saidViewfinder
For me, perhaps my favorite full frame advantage is the quality of the cameras viewfinder. If you have ever used an older film SLR, you might have been impressed by the size and clarity of the viewfinder. Indeed, one of the shortcomings of crop factor DSLRs is the relatively small viewfinder. Full frame cameras overcome this greatly.
Now that I have a full frame camera, using a crop factor cameras viewfinder can feel a bit like staring down a tunnel. If youve never had the pleasure of checking out a full frame viewfinder, try to get hands on one. It makes it much easier to manually focus a lens and make sure that your shot is in perfect focus compared to a crop factor counterpart.
Focal Length
The 24mm f/1.4 lens. On a crop factor camera, the effective focal length of this lens is around 36mm. To view the flipside, you would be required to find a 16mm lens for crop factor; a 16mm f/1.4 prime doesnt even exist. In short, fast wide lenses are much easier to come by on full frame.
High ISO
If theres one performance factor that I really appreciate from a full frame camera, its the advantage in high ISO shooting. The larger sensor benefits from a technical advantage. In the most basic technical terms, the larger sensor allows the manufacturers to not cram the photosites onto the sensor, and the camera benefits in high ISO performance because of this.
Had a good play with the 5Dc today and got it for the weekend however so far I have to say I'm slightly disappointed with itbit of a let down to say the least...
I have been using a Tamron 28-75 2.8 and my own 50 1.8, the sharpness just isn't as good as my 500D. I maybe pixel peeping as I'm zooming in on the shots but I am doing it on both cameras same setup and same lens.
I am however impressed with the viewfinder, the DoF is just lush and the bokeh is just so smooth, so maybe it is just this camera that may be slightly off. Doesn't. Look like my upgrade to full frame will be happening just yet!
Post the pics up comparing the 500D to the 5D where you feel the 500D is better. The IQ of the 5D will be better 9 times out of 10 unless the camera is defective or your technique is suspect.