kevin m
Veteran
Gabor, thanks for the links. He certainly does have a bunch of neat shots, and I find the one's I like are the ones that don't rely on razor thin DOF. That Ballerina pic I linked is quite stunning, too, I think.
is there Exif data on the girl with the red shirt? I dont have anything that can read that.... Completely curious.
It says it was taken with an M8 at f1.0. To find the EXIF, "save as" and open the image in photoshop (or equivalent) and under file select file info > camera data 1.
The endless drivel just rubbed many of us wrong.
DoF is affected by your medium (or sensor) size. The smaller the medium/sensor, the deeper your DoF (witness DP&S cameras and their seeming infinite DoF compared to say, a film camera or FF DSLR). Though it has to do with the distance from the camera to the subject to get the same framing, technically (and not the medium/sensor size).
For example, a DP&S with a 50mm lens will have a deep DoF (generically speaking for illustrative purposes). A camera with a crop of say, 1.33x will have less. A film camera (or FF digital) will have the least DoF. This is because your effective focal length moves closer to the actual in the example above, and you need to move closer to your subject to have the same framing. As we know, DoF decreases with subject distance.
So that's why the Nocti looks different in that regard from say, the R-D1 (1.5x) to the M8 (1.33x) to film (1x).