Author | Thread |
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07/14/2006 10:15:50 PM · #1 |
i been thinking, maybe im wrong, but i think the crop factor does a lot to do with sharpness, i mean 50mm with crop is someting about 85 no?
ok for example with 50mmm , and i want to make a full body shot, I must get far from my subject as with a full frame camara. (sorry i dont know how to explain this my english kinda sucks)
crop factor = 5 meter from the subjet
full frame = 3 meters from subejt
does men that the full frame has more information of pixels and that mean more resolution?
what do you think?? |
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07/14/2006 10:58:55 PM · #2 |
Originally posted by renefunk: i been thinking, maybe im wrong, but i think the crop factor does a lot to do with sharpness, i mean 50mm with crop is someting about 85 no?
ok for example with 50mmm , and i want to make a full body shot, I must get far from my subject as with a full frame camara. (sorry i dont know how to explain this my english kinda sucks)
crop factor = 5 meter from the subjet
full frame = 3 meters from subejt
does men that the full frame has more information of pixels and that mean more resolution?
what do you think?? |
Yes, all the full frame sensors have more information or pixels. But that is inherent in their design, and not a function of the crop factor.
What full frame sensors do have is the ability to fit the same amount of pixels on their surface as a smaller sensor, with a larger footprint for each pixel-site. Meaning higher light sensitivity for the same amount of pixels.
I don't think this really reflects sharpness though.
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