vicmortelmans
Well-known
First some thoughts that lead me to the question in the title.
I've acquired a 6x9 format folding camera. I was first questioning myself if the f-values on the lens are the same as on my 35mm camera (I mean: do they apply to identical light conditions). This seems to be the case.
Secondly, I was interested in comparing the field of view to my 35 mm camera's. I found a conversion table on the internet that learnt me that the 105mm lens on the 6x9 is equivalent to a ~40mm lens on a 35mm camera.
Knowing that the formula for the f-value is focus length divided by (effective) aperture diameter and assuming that the effective aperture is mainly limited by physical (and budgetting) constraints, it's obvious that longer focus is paid by lower f-value. Because large film formats require longer focus for the same field of view, photographing on large film formats implies having less speed.
So, I assume that one of the reasons for using smaller film formats is the availability of faster lenses. Of course, film grain limits miniaturisation of film format (cf. the low resulution of APS film).
Now, in the digital world, the film is replaced by light-sensitive arrays, which tend to be much smaller than film, having comparable or even higher resolution and sensitivity.
I never realised, but this seems to me one of the key technological benefits of digital photography: to get access to higher speed lenses (or if you look at it the other way: cheaper lenses with comparable speed to 35 mm camera's).
Strange is, I've never come accross a digital camera that advertised with extra-high-speed lenses... Isn't this a valid marketing feature? Or is my reasoning on technology wrong?
I've acquired a 6x9 format folding camera. I was first questioning myself if the f-values on the lens are the same as on my 35mm camera (I mean: do they apply to identical light conditions). This seems to be the case.
Secondly, I was interested in comparing the field of view to my 35 mm camera's. I found a conversion table on the internet that learnt me that the 105mm lens on the 6x9 is equivalent to a ~40mm lens on a 35mm camera.
Knowing that the formula for the f-value is focus length divided by (effective) aperture diameter and assuming that the effective aperture is mainly limited by physical (and budgetting) constraints, it's obvious that longer focus is paid by lower f-value. Because large film formats require longer focus for the same field of view, photographing on large film formats implies having less speed.
So, I assume that one of the reasons for using smaller film formats is the availability of faster lenses. Of course, film grain limits miniaturisation of film format (cf. the low resulution of APS film).
Now, in the digital world, the film is replaced by light-sensitive arrays, which tend to be much smaller than film, having comparable or even higher resolution and sensitivity.
I never realised, but this seems to me one of the key technological benefits of digital photography: to get access to higher speed lenses (or if you look at it the other way: cheaper lenses with comparable speed to 35 mm camera's).
Strange is, I've never come accross a digital camera that advertised with extra-high-speed lenses... Isn't this a valid marketing feature? Or is my reasoning on technology wrong?