Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Actually, focal length, per se, has nothing to do with DOF.
Nonsense. If you're going to post attempted corrections, get your facts straight. Read the previous posts, look at the math.
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Actually, focal length, per se, has nothing to do with DOF.
Originally posted by: tfinch2
Originally posted by: destrekor
Originally posted by: tfinch2
Sensor size affects DOF.
A FF image at f/3.5 will have less DOF than my 4/3 2x crop sensor at f/3.5.
That's why you can have a P&S with a tiny sensor at f/2.8 and the DOF is very big.
may I ask how so?
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/digital-camera-sensor-size.htm
Originally posted by: Madwand1
I think she was talking about P&S digicams. In context, I don't see a significant problem with her statement; it's more right than wrong. Read my previous note if you don't see the point -- focal length is the dominant factor in DoF, other factors constant. Digicams have small sensors and short focal lengths, hence greater DoF.
But I predict this will change. In 5 years and all DSLRs will be sold with FF sensors. Specialized lenses like Canon's EFS series will be history.
Originally posted by: Lucky
For professional sport shooters, it's a boon to have that 70-200 2.8 become (essentially) a 300 2.8. Or for that 300 to become a 450 2.8.
Originally posted by: GTaudiophile
Nope. Canon's EOS-5D and EOS-1Ds MkII have Full-Frame (35mm) sensors. Yields are MUCH lower/cost is MUCH highter than the smaller 1.6 Crop counterparts. But I predict this will change. In 5 years and all DSLRs will be sold with FF sensors. Specialized lenses like Canon's EFS series will be history.
Originally posted by: Madwand1
Originally posted by: Lucky
For professional sport shooters, it's a boon to have that 70-200 2.8 become (essentially) a 300 2.8. Or for that 300 to become a 450 2.8.
It doesn't actually do that. A sensor crop is a sensor crop; it doesn't get you magnification for free. If you have the same lens, the same pixel density, and essentially the same sensor but different sensor sizes, then you could get the same pictures from the bigger sensor by chopping off pixels in the edges, whereas you can't do the reverse.
If you get magnification from a sensor, it's due to greater pixel density, not due to the crop factor. That said, cropped DSLRs often have greatest pixel density among "serious" cameras, which is one reason that they're favored by such photographers.
However, if you compared for example a 300D/10D to a 1Ds II, and thought that the 1.6x crop factor would give you a magnification advantage, you'd be dead wrong -- the 1Ds II has greater pixel density; you could crop its image down to the 300D sensor size and still have greater magnification in the result.
Originally posted by: jiwq
okay so to clear things up, if you had a ff camera and a 1.6x crop camera and took a picture of a subject with a 50mm f/1.8 lens at f/1.8, would you get the same amount of background blur?
Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Originally posted by: jiwq
okay so to clear things up, if you had a ff camera and a 1.6x crop camera and took a picture of a subject with a 50mm f/1.8 lens at f/1.8, would you get the same amount of background blur?
Specify how you're taking the picture.
A 50mm at 1.6x would be equivalent to an 80mm lens' field of view (narrower than 50mm).
Would you be taking the first shot with FF at 50mm, then taking the second shot with 1.6x and 50mm, but backed up to match the field of view as the first shot? In this case no.
Originally posted by: jiwq
Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Originally posted by: jiwq
okay so to clear things up, if you had a ff camera and a 1.6x crop camera and took a picture of a subject with a 50mm f/1.8 lens at f/1.8, would you get the same amount of background blur?
Specify how you're taking the picture.
A 50mm at 1.6x would be equivalent to an 80mm lens' field of view (narrower than 50mm).
Would you be taking the first shot with FF at 50mm, then taking the second shot with 1.6x and 50mm, but backed up to match the field of view as the first shot? In this case no.
standing in the same spot
Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Agreed with all your points, however price of course needs to be considered.
I stand by what I posted. Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).Originally posted by: Madwand1
Nonsense. If you're going to post attempted corrections, get your facts straight. Read the previous posts, look at the math.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Actually, focal length, per se, has nothing to do with DOF.
Originally posted by: jiwq
okay so to clear things up, if you had a ff camera and a 1.6x crop camera and took a picture of a subject with a 50mm f/1.8 lens at f/1.8, would you get the same amount of background blur?
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).
Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).
Ehhhh... I'm not so sure, but I'm far from saying "you're wrong."
Take the Canon 50mm f/1.0 lens. 50mm aperture, EXTREMELY shallow DOF. Then take a 200mm f/4, like the 200mm end on the 70-200mm f/4L. Still a 50mm aperture, but it will not have the same EXTREMELY shallow DOF as the 50mm f/1.0
Originally posted by: brandonbull
Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).
Ehhhh... I'm not so sure, but I'm far from saying "you're wrong."
Take the Canon 50mm f/1.0 lens. 50mm aperture, EXTREMELY shallow DOF. Then take a 200mm f/4, like the 200mm end on the 70-200mm f/4L. Still a 50mm aperture, but it will not have the same EXTREMELY shallow DOF as the 50mm f/1.0
Cold with solution?![]()
Originally posted by: Madwand1
DON'T GO THERE. You'll never get the time that you spend reading the "Cold with solution thread" back.
Edit: Explanation: "Cold with solution" is an ATOT short form for "huh?" based on an old thread with exemplified it.
I got FBB's cautious post, and think it's time for ZV to respond.
Originally posted by: AMDUALY
Yeah, this is what i heard last time in another discussion so i believed it to be true. Then I asked my prof if we should also pay attention to the sensor size and she looked at me like i was crazy.
Same focusing distance? If you're shooting a subject at 5 meters with the 50mm f/1 and a subject at 50 meters with the 200mm f/4, you will have a larger DOF for the photo taken with the 200mm f/4 because of differing focusing distances.Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Ehhhh... I'm not so sure, but I'm far from saying "you're wrong."Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).
Take the Canon 50mm f/1.0 lens. 50mm aperture, EXTREMELY shallow DOF. Then take a 200mm f/4, like the 200mm end on the 70-200mm f/4L. Still a 50mm aperture, but it will not have the same EXTREMELY shallow DOF as the 50mm f/1.0
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Same focusing distance? If you're shooting a subject at 5 meters with the 50mm f/1 and a subject at 50 meters with the 200mm f/4, you will have a larger DOF for the photo taken with the 200mm f/4 because of differing focusing distances.Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Ehhhh... I'm not so sure, but I'm far from saying "you're wrong."Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Assuming a constant aperture size (note that aperture size is NOT F-number), a constant distance to subject, and a constant negative size, the focal length of the lens will not affect DOF. A 50mm f2 lens has a 25mm aperture opening and it will have the same DOF properties as a 100mm f4 lens (which also has a 25mm aperture).
Take the Canon 50mm f/1.0 lens. 50mm aperture, EXTREMELY shallow DOF. Then take a 200mm f/4, like the 200mm end on the 70-200mm f/4L. Still a 50mm aperture, but it will not have the same EXTREMELY shallow DOF as the 50mm f/1.0
ZV
Originally posted by: fuzzybabybunny
Yup, same focusing distance. 5m for the 50mm and 5m for the 200mm, or Xm for the 50mm and Xm for the 200mm. It involves cropping the 50mm image to match the FOV of the 200mm image (a pretty substantial crop, and you may run into resolution limitations?), which is making it hard for me to visualize concretely which would have the greater DOF. A test would be great, but from general experience, a large part of me just feels that the 200mm f/4 will have greater DOF.
