Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/06/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Steve, I make no bones of the fact that I am weak on the technical stuff - start talking circles of confusion and I circle the wagons - but I do believe I am correct on this. Further, you've raised I point I admit I've yet to understand - and that's the question of the "crop" and the need to "enlarge" it. It doesn't seem that you're "enlarging" it - WYSIWYG, no? Mount a 50 on a camera with a 1.5 crop factor, and the image you get appears the same as though shot with a 75 on a full frame. Or, put an 85 on a 2 1/4 and don't you get a "reduction" equivalent to a 50 on a 35? On 6/25/05 6:51 PM, "Steve Unsworth" <mail@steveunsworth.co.uk> wrote: > Is this true? Since you have to enlarge a cropped version more won't the > circle of confusion come into play - i.e. the depth of field will reside > some where between the 35mm and 1.5 version. > > Steve > > > -----Original Message----- > From: lug-bounces+mail=steveunsworth.co.uk@leica-users.org > [mailto:lug-bounces+mail=steveunsworth.co.uk@leica-users.org] On Behalf > Of B. D. Colen > Sent: 25 June 2005 19:51 > To: Leica Users Group > Subject: Re: [Leica] new Puts article > > > Nope. The depth of field is indeed independent of the crop - it's the > same as the "real" focal length of the lens. But that means that when > you shoot with a 35 mm lens with a 1.5 crop factor, you are getting an > image that looks like you shot it with a 52 mm lens, but with the depth > of field of a 35. So your 50 1.4 becomes a 75 1.4, but with the depth of > field of a 50 1.4 > - which actually is probably an advantage in that case. :-)