JChrome
Street Worker
Bonjour Amigos y Amigas!
I have a Mamiya Press with two different backs. I got a sneaking suspicion that the sharpness would be different between them. So I decided to put it to an extreme test.
1. I mounted the camera to a tripod.
2. Mounted the 150mm lens and focused it as close as it would go.
3. Mounted three macro rings between the lens and the body. I need that DoF to be *tiny*.
4. Set up a tape measure going at a 45 degree angle on a table.
5. Shoot with the first back. Then change the back and shoot with the second (without change the lens, focus or camera).
Here is a close up of the results:
Notice the rightmost corner of the '5' is not so sharp in the image on the left. But it gets sharper in the image on the right.
Now, in the grand scale of things, I won't be shooting like this very often and it may not have such an impact here. However, I know little about optics or optical theory. But I'm wondering how this impact would scale to other scenarios.
Let's say the focus is off by 1/16 of an inch here (the tape measure is in inches). The whole DoF is maybe 3/16th inch or so. Since the focus is off by 1/16th inch, that's 30% of the DoF, does that mean if the DoF grows to 6 inches, the focus will be off by 2 inches? Does it scale in that fashion or am I incorrect in that?
If the focus remains off by 1/16th of an inch and I am shooting with a DoF of 2 feet, then I obviously have no problem but if it's the former, then it may be an issue.
Thanks for the help and Happy Memorial Day (for those in the USA).
I have a Mamiya Press with two different backs. I got a sneaking suspicion that the sharpness would be different between them. So I decided to put it to an extreme test.
1. I mounted the camera to a tripod.
2. Mounted the 150mm lens and focused it as close as it would go.
3. Mounted three macro rings between the lens and the body. I need that DoF to be *tiny*.
4. Set up a tape measure going at a 45 degree angle on a table.
5. Shoot with the first back. Then change the back and shoot with the second (without change the lens, focus or camera).
Here is a close up of the results:
Notice the rightmost corner of the '5' is not so sharp in the image on the left. But it gets sharper in the image on the right.


Now, in the grand scale of things, I won't be shooting like this very often and it may not have such an impact here. However, I know little about optics or optical theory. But I'm wondering how this impact would scale to other scenarios.
Let's say the focus is off by 1/16 of an inch here (the tape measure is in inches). The whole DoF is maybe 3/16th inch or so. Since the focus is off by 1/16th inch, that's 30% of the DoF, does that mean if the DoF grows to 6 inches, the focus will be off by 2 inches? Does it scale in that fashion or am I incorrect in that?
If the focus remains off by 1/16th of an inch and I am shooting with a DoF of 2 feet, then I obviously have no problem but if it's the former, then it may be an issue.
Thanks for the help and Happy Memorial Day (for those in the USA).