And it seems to be so much easier to get it right SOOC with the Mii vs the 7d! Don’t now if I’ve just got lucky but lighting, coloring, skin tone…. Having said that what I do already see a difference in during the past few weeks of shooting with both is image quality is better on the Mii. I actually like always having extra length on the long end so I actually seem to prefer cropped. I would just compensate… bought a 35mm for my 7D instead of a 50mm, etc. cropped issue that you can’t get the same look by using a different size lens. I have never bought into the full frame vs. But when I’m being lazy and want a quick shot while out with friends or at my kiddos school and hate not having access to a flash! I don’t own a big flash because I love wide open apertures with natural light. The Mii’s 9 point seems so old school! Very hard to quickly get the spot focus to the diagonal points, very annoying! I also really miss the pop up flash. Main issue: I TERRIBLY miss the 19 point focus of my 7d. Used the Mii for sports once but the reason I went back to the 7D was for the extra reach it gave me with my 70-200. Really want a Miii but a deal I just can’t pass up.Ĭomparing the two speed hasn’t been an issue. LOVE! Got lucky and found a brand new Mark ii that someone would trade for lessons for their Miii. Loved my 50mm 1.8 but felt too tight at times so I upgraded to a 35mm 1.4 L. This one was simply to answer my own question: No, you cannot achieve the look of a full-frame camera simply by placing a wider lens on a crop-sensor camera. Explaining what that “look” is, requires an entire post of its own. In our own business, we’ve used mostly longer lenses, and have never used a full frame camera! The wider angle lenses on a full-frame body is just a look that, as we are growing in our style, we personally find beautiful, and we are excited about incorporating it into our future work. That said, you don’t always need to match the focal length look of a full frame camera. It is impossible to exactly match the focal length look of a full frame camera by using a wider lens on a crop-sensor camera like the 7D. It just crops a 22mm! You still have the same warping effect of using that wider lens, which is not very attractive on humans. Using a 1.6 crop-sensor on a 22mm focal length lens does not turn it into a 35mm lens. An extremely wide lens is called a fisheye and does this warping a lot. I was wandering around our condo with the 5D pressed against my face feeling like, “All these years I’ve never seen the world through a camera the way it’s supposed to be seen!” It was as though I had been wearing horse blinders every time I had put a camera to my face… like someone had cropped off my peripheral!ĭo you see how in the second image, everything appears to be very square, and in the first one, it all seems to be a little warped? See how the background is “smaller” in the first one? This is what happens when you use a wider lens. Those who have upgraded to a full-frame sensor know what I’m talking about. To me, it was eye-opening… literally, like my eye was never open all the way. To some, the difference may be indistinguishable. Then I tried to match the depth of field by leaving the 17-55mm at f/2.8 and stopping the 35mm down to f/4.0. HERE’S WHAT I WAS WONDERING: “Could I achieve the look of a full-frame camera by simply using wider lenses on my 7D crop-sensor camera? What would be the difference?”īelow, I tried to match the look of a 35mm 1.4L lens on a Canon 5d by using a 17-55mm 2.8 lens on a Canon 7D and zooming in to about 22mm (22mm * 1.6 = 35mm). This is the exact same lens on the 7D, then on the 5D: The 5D mkII and the 5D mkIII are both full frame cameras. This means a 35mm lens on a crop-sensor camera actually looks more like a 50mm lens on a full-frame camera (35mm * 1.6 = 56mm). A crop-sensor crops the image of a full-frame sensor by a factor of 1.6. Hopefully this will help someone else trying to figure out how a full-frame would actually affect their photography.Īll Canon dSLRs with a model number higher than 5 (ie- 7D, 60D, all Rebels, etc) have crop-sensors. So I rented a 5d mark II to compare to our 7D and other crop-sensor cameras. Let’s take a break from our photography and my media projects to have a TECH TALK! I’ve been wondering whether a full-frame sensor camera would really make that big of a difference in our photography.
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