If you go from FF to APS-C, then you divide by 1.5, so if you use a FF camera with an 85mm f1.8 lens and you want the same look on your APS-C camera, then you must find a 56mm f1.2 APS-C lens. Here I just divided 85 and 1.8 by 1.5. Stop confusing people with this nonsense.
Field of View in Full frame vs. Crop Sensor Cameras [Includes photo comparison]. When photographers are interested in buying a full frame camera for the first
5. Sony. RX1R II. Check Price. (Image credit: Leica) The best full-frame compact cameras are for those time when an APS-C sensor just won't cut it. Marrying unbeatable image quality with the convenience of a compact, these cameras really do provide the best of both worlds – though it is not a combo that comes cheap.
The factor relating the 50mm focal length of the normal full frame lens and the 31.3mm of the equivalent normal APS-C lens is often called the "crop factor", sometimes the "digital multiplier". It's 1.6x for Canon EOS DSLRs and 1.5x for Nikon, Pentax and Sony (who have very slightly larger APS-C sensors). It doesn't actually multiply the focal
The Sony E 70-350mm F4.5-6.3 G OSS is a rare gem – a first party APS-C lens that feels on par with the companies full frame option. In fact, I could see this lens being very enticing for those that either own both full frame and APS-C bodies or as a lightweight telephoto option for those with one of Sony’s higher resolution full frame
The main difference between a full frame and APS C camera is the sensor size. For this, you’ll get a closer look from crop sensor camera rather than full frame cameras. Sensor size is mainly the physical dimension of the sensor’s dimension. The most common full frame sensor size is 36×24 millimeter. Whereas, APSC or crop sensor size is 24
Adding a teleconverter will also reduce the light by 1 stop for a 1.4x converter and by 2 stops for a 2x. However, adding a teleconverter doesn’t change the lens’ minimum focusing distance. For example, if you add a 2x converter to a 300mm lens that focuses down to five feet, you get a 600mm lens that focuses down to five feet.
The 50mm lens on your A7III gives you 50mm of full-frame equivalent field of view. The 35mm lens on your A6000 gives you about 52.5mm of full-frame equivalent field of view because of the smaller sensor. And since it's an APS-C lens designed for the smaller sensor, when mounted to your A7III it cannot develop a projection of the scene that
Calculation. 35 mm equivalent focal lengths are calculated by multiplying the actual focal length of the lens by the crop factor of the sensor. Typical crop factors are 1.26× – 1.29× for Canon (1.35× for Sigma "H") APS-H format, 1.5× for Nikon APS-C ("DX") format (also used by Sony, Pentax, Fuji, Samsung and others), 1.6× for Canon APS-C jHo1slr.
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/675
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/278
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/709
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/721
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/898
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/619
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/518
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/965
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/604
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/352
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/648
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/238
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/530
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/586
  • s7vfym1lvn.pages.dev/366
  • full frame vs aps c lens conversion