Bill Pierce
Well-known
One of the things we didn’t talk much about in our recent thread about different sensor sizes were the different sizes of lenses for cameras with different sized sensors. When it comes to the tiny sensor bodies, there are cameras with an effective 28 to 600mm zoom that are small enough to be easily carried and used without tracking attention. The sensor limitations are such that you will want to use a relatively low ISO to maintain image quality. But I don’t shoot much with an effective 600mm lens in bad light indoors.
There in lies the rub. You can take a relatively compact full frame mirrorless body, but when you put a long lens, fixed focal length or zoom on it, you up the weight and size of the rig ’til it’s almost the same size for all practical purposes as a big DSLR.
For me the sweet spot is the APS-C sensor. High speed, long focal length lenses are still big and heavy, but the majority of lenses that we normally use are, for me, conveniently sized. I know that many of us think that the image quality edge goes to full frame and disagree with me. But my conviction is that sensors have improved dramatically and there are so many other factors in image quality that sensor size is no longer the overriding factor that it might have been. Processing programs and our ability with them have a huge effect. And those many things that effect image quality in all photography - lens quality, accurate focus, lack of camera movement, are once again in full play.
Does sensor size matter? Of course. But in that long list of different sized sensors, are two adjacent sensor sizes dramatically different in performance. I don’t think so. And I do think in many situations, the smaller lenses that are part and parcel of the smaller sensor rig give us a more compact rig that offers advantages in a variety of situations. Smaller sensor - smaller lenses - smaller rig. To me, that can be important, and I would like to know how you feel about it.
There in lies the rub. You can take a relatively compact full frame mirrorless body, but when you put a long lens, fixed focal length or zoom on it, you up the weight and size of the rig ’til it’s almost the same size for all practical purposes as a big DSLR.
For me the sweet spot is the APS-C sensor. High speed, long focal length lenses are still big and heavy, but the majority of lenses that we normally use are, for me, conveniently sized. I know that many of us think that the image quality edge goes to full frame and disagree with me. But my conviction is that sensors have improved dramatically and there are so many other factors in image quality that sensor size is no longer the overriding factor that it might have been. Processing programs and our ability with them have a huge effect. And those many things that effect image quality in all photography - lens quality, accurate focus, lack of camera movement, are once again in full play.
Does sensor size matter? Of course. But in that long list of different sized sensors, are two adjacent sensor sizes dramatically different in performance. I don’t think so. And I do think in many situations, the smaller lenses that are part and parcel of the smaller sensor rig give us a more compact rig that offers advantages in a variety of situations. Smaller sensor - smaller lenses - smaller rig. To me, that can be important, and I would like to know how you feel about it.