I just love bringing up the APS-C VS Full Frame discussion and in this video, I also talk about smartphone cameras because I know it'll make haters go crazy. Full frame vs. APS-C vs. Micro Four Thirds. Usually, one of the advantages of a full frame sensor is its shallower depth of field, which can be desirable for portraits (I’ll admit that was the reason I got my first full frame camera, a Nikon D3, many years ago). However, for 360 photos, photographers prefer having a deep depth of field. A full-frame sensor measures 36mm x 24mm – the traditional size for 35mm cameras. An APS-C sensor size is smaller, measuring 23.6mm x 15.7mm. You can have both a 16-megapixel full-frame camera and a 24-megapixel APS-C camera. The smaller APS-C sensor in this example crams a lot more pixels onto that smaller space. Which isn’t always better. No crop factor: The telephoto reach of a full-frame camera is lessened by not having a crop sensor. A 200mm lens on a full-frame camera reaches to 200mm; a 200mm lens on a 1.5x crop sensor camera reaches to 300mm. If you’ve made it this far and you still like the sound of a full-frame camera, it’s time to ask yourself a few key questions: The field of view that a 50mm lens has on a APS-C (DX) sensor camera is equivalent to a 75mm lens on a full frame (FX) sensor camera. That's why many wildlife photographers prefer using APS-C cameras, where if a full frame camera was to produce the same frame filling image as an APS-C camera using a 500mm lens, it would have to use a 750mm lens A crop sensor is smaller than a full frame sensor. That means the edges of the image captured by a full frame camera are cropped by the APS-C sensor. Because this is a smaller sensor, it has a slight disadvantage in how much fine detail it can capture. The cameras supporting this sensor can be smaller and usually cheaper, what is a nice benefit

I will also be comparing three types of lenses and attachments: Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 lens with £5 macro extension tubes – normal lens and tubes for short. Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 lens with £65 Raynox DCR-250 macro lens attachment – normal lens and Raynox for short (pictured below). £1000 Canon EF 100mm f/2.8L Macro – dedicated macro for short.

wPi2.
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/266
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/189
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/143
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/142
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/264
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/266
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/260
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/250
  • fbzkgig9c9.pages.dev/39
  • difference between full frame camera and aps c