Barring a few exceptions, lenses that are made for MFT and APS-C sensor size tend to be substantially more expensive than their full-frame twin. And this is even more starkly visible when the original FF lens has a small aperture value. Any full-frame lens which has a sub f/2 aperture value needs to be at least f/1 or less for an MFT system
You will be utilising the full size of the full frame sensor in these cameras. EF Lens + APS-C Sensor RF Mount Camera: If you use an EF lens with an adaptor on an APS-C RF mount camera (EOS R7 or EOS R10), then there will be a crop factor applied of 1.6x.
Cameras with APS-C sensors are traditionally favored by street photographers, landscape shooters, or anyone who can't justify the cost or overall weight of a full-frame camera.
To do a conversion from APS-C focal length to its 35mm full frame equivalent focal length, you take the focal length of the lens and multiply it by the crop factor of the sensor. e.g. If using a 50mm lens on a Canon APS-C camera…. Focal length of lens = 50mm. Canon APS-C sensor crop factor = 1.62x.
A "nifty-50"mm lens on an APS-C (1.5x crop factor) camera will have a field of view more akin to a 75mm lens on a full-frame camera. The 35mm focal length lens on an APS-C camera is needed to get the traditional 50mm “normal” field of view of the classic 50mm lens.
35mm / Full-Frame vs APS-C vs Micro Four Thirds vs 1″ / CX. If I were to mount a 24mm full-frame lens on an APS-C camera to capture the above shot, I would only be cutting off the corners of the image – not getting any closer physically. My focal length does not change in any way. It is still a 24mm lens.
oTRh. Nikon Z50. A little gem of a camera with some powerful features. Sensor: APS-C CMOS Megapixels: 20.88 Lens mount: Nikon ZAF System: Phase detection with 209 AF points, Eye AF and Subject Tracking Viewfinder: 2.36million-dot electronic viewfinderScreen: Tilting 3.2-inch 1,040,000-dot touchscreen, Max video Resolution: 4K at 30fps and Full-HD at 120fps
The switch from an APS-C format or Micro 4/3 camera – essentially any ‘crop-frame’ sensor – to a full frame model is often seen as the standard upgrade path for enthusiasts and professionals to take.
Dedicated fisheye conversion lens for the FE 28 mm F2 provides 16 mm focal length with fisheye perspective and a full 180° angle of view (diagonally). The converter has been specifically designed for the FE 28 mm F2, and therefore offers expressive fisheye perspective with excellent image quality from infinity down to the closest focusing distance, without compromising the basic image quality
In theory, an image made by an APS-C sensor requires a greater degree of enlargement than an image made by a full-frame sensor (all other things being equal), and so the apparent defocus effect on the APS-C image is exaggerated. So, yes, the DoF scale is for full-frame, and doesn't technically apply to APS-C.
22. 61. 27. While it is generally recommended to use a full-frame lens on a full-frame camera, there are situations where using an APS-C lens is not such a bad idea. The larger sensor size of a full-frame camera ensures that you capture more light, which translates to less noise and more detail in your pictures.
If you have an APS-C sensor, that’s going to be a crop factor of 1.5. So a 50mm lens on full-frame, on an APS-C sensor it is going to be a 75mm, it’s going to be cropped in. You’re not going
full frame to aps c lens conversion