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p.1 #14 · Proof of Full Frame IQ vs Crop? | |
joekraft wrote:
This issue can't be resolved in a web forum. 100% crops don't do the full image justice, and web-sized images look largely alike between crop and FF. Add to that the photog's. skill - someone who knows what they are doing with a crop can blow away a poorly executed shot on a FF. I wouldn't let a bunch of crops or test images guide your decision.
For me, it came down to this - FF or not, almost every picture I saw here, flickr, wherever, that I really liked, was taken on a FF camera. Add in the technical details back in the day - file size, larger, brighter viewfinder, etc. - and it made sense, for me. But again, very likely that may have been due to the skill of the person taking those pictures.
If one were so inclined to cycle through pbase photos using a very expensive body vs. a cheap body, you'll more than likely find a higher percentage of good photos from the expensive body.
However, it would be a case of correlation inferring causation to assume that the expensive body is the cause of better photos. You'll find that frequently the people buying the expensive bodies (and lenses) are the people that are investing their time and effort into the hobby. These types of people are also the type of people that are likely to take it more seriously and consciously try to make better photographs vs. the person who buys an entry-level DSLR and uses it as a glorified point and shoot camera.
In fact, you can take a look at photos created with the EF-S 18-55 3.5-5.6 and while a majority of the photos may look somewhat crummy, many will look very nice and well composed. It doesn't have many of the characteristic traits of nicer zoom lenses (such as a lack of DoF or heightened chromatic aberrations), but you'll find many nice photos nonetheless.
Zara wrote:
As many have already pointed out, FF offers reduced DoF for the same subject distance, aperture and angle of view. Or same aperture and focal length and framing. Or which ever way you look at it.
The FF sensor requires different composition which affects DoF. Given the same subject distance, focal length and aperture, the DoF will be exactly the same. E.g.:
http://www.have-camera-will-travel.com/field_reports/full_frame_vs_crop_sensor_-.html
But, yes, same focal length and framing will affect DoF due to a necessity to change your distance from the subject.
Edited on Jun 10, 2009 at 05:53 PM · View previous versions
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