04-14-2015 10:37 PM
04-14-2015 11:09 PM
NO. 50 mm is considered Normal on full frame & you MULTIPLY, not divide when talking crop bodies so 30 mm X 1.6 =48 mm effectively.
04-15-2015 05:51 AM - edited 04-15-2015 05:56 AM
04-15-2015 07:38 AM
@cicopo wrote:NO. 50 mm is considered Normal on full frame & you MULTIPLY, not divide when talking crop bodies so 30 mm X 1.6 =48 mm effectively.
No, there was nothing wrong with the OP's math; division is the correct operation for the direction his computation was going. It was only his underlying assumption (that 35mm is "normal" on a FF camera) that was wrong. IOW, 50 / 1.6 = 31.25, which is "normal" on a crop camera.
04-15-2015 08:51 AM
Bob you are correct. I misinterpreted the way the question was being asked.
04-15-2015 11:14 AM
But to the OP's actual question, the answer is, yes. If he considers a 35mm lens "normal" than 20mm will appear the same normal.
Now we can debate whether 35mm is considered normal on a full frame or not. The image diagonal for FF is 43mm. Is that normal? APS-C is 30mm. Is that normal?
My personal taste is a 28mm on a crop and 50mm on a FF. But I may not be "normal" ?
04-15-2015 02:54 PM - edited 04-15-2015 02:57 PM
What's been considered a "normal" or "standard" lens has varied quite a bit over the years.... from 40mm to 58 or even 60mm on a film/full frame camera.
IMO, on a crop camera a 24mm or 28mm can serve nicely as a slightly wide "normal". 30mm on crop comes the closest to the standard 50mm on full frame. But 35mm is pretty close, and 40mm is only slightly telephoto. So, pick what you like best: 24mm to 40mm range. Any of them might work.
Then all you have to do is decide how you feel about "normal". When I was shooting film, I always prefered something a little wider.... so I generally used a 35mm or 40mm as my "normal". Now using some crop cameras, Canon EF 28/1.8 USM is my "normal" lens. (The 24/1.4L would be closer to my preferred angle of view and is 2/3 stop faster. But it's also a lot bigger, heavier and more expensive.)
If you are actually looking for a moderate wide angle like 35mm on full frame, then a 20 or 21mm would serve nicely. I use the EF 20/2.8 USM and like it alot on my crop sensor cameras. It's a bit bigger than the 28/1.8, though. And 1-1/3 stop "slower".
***********
Alan Myers
San Jose, Calif., USA
"Walk softly and carry a big lens."
GEAR: 5DII, 7D(x2), 50D(x3), some other cameras, various lenses & accessories
FLICKR & PRINTROOM
04-17-2015 12:54 AM
There's a few accepted norms of what's "normal". For a 35mm film SLR (or "full frame" DSLR) a 50mm lens is considered a "normal" angle of view. For an APS-C camera it's about 30mm. For a medium format camera (Rollei, Hasselblad, PhaseOne, etc.) it's about 80mm.
But there's a slightly more accurate math-based way to calculate "normal". The "normals" provided above are rounded values to the next highest even multiple of 10.
For any camera sensor, if you calculate the diagonal measure of the sensor (in millimeters) then that is the focal length of the lens that is considered "normal".
For a 35mm film camera (or "full frame" DSLR) the sensor measures approximately 36mm wide by 24mm tall. That works out to about 43mm. √(24^2 + 36^2)
For an APS-C DSLR, it's roughly 23mm x 15mm. That works out to just over 27mm.
For a medium format 6x6 camera (6cm x 6cm) it's 85mm.
For a medium format 645 camera (6cm x 4.5cm) it's 75mm.
An image shot at a "normal" focal length will seem neither telephoto nor wide-angle. If you perform the "angle of view" calculation with such a lens, you end up with a horizontal angle of view of roughly 45º -- which somewhat approximates about what the human eye can take in without having to "look around".
04-17-2015 08:02 AM
@TCampbell wrote:There's a few accepted norms of what's "normal". For a 35mm film SLR (or "full frame" DSLR) a 50mm lens is considered a "normal" angle of view. For an APS-C camera it's about 30mm. For a medium format camera (Rollei, Hasselblad, PhaseOne, etc.) it's about 80mm.
The usual lens on a 2¼ x 2¼ in. twin-lens reflex was 75 mm. I guess that had to be considered "normal" by definition, since very few TLRs had interchangeable lenses.
But there's a slightly more accurate math-based way to calculate "normal". The "normals" provided above are rounded values to the next highest even multiple of 10.
For any camera sensor, if you calculate the diagonal measure of the sensor (in millimeters) then that is the focal length of the lens that is considered "normal".
For a 35mm film camera (or "full frame" DSLR) the sensor measures approximately 36mm wide by 24mm tall. That works out to about 43mm. √(24^2 + 36^2)
For an APS-C DSLR, it's roughly 23mm x 15mm. That works out to just over 27mm.
For a medium format 6x6 camera (6cm x 6cm) it's 85mm.
For a medium format 645 camera (6cm x 4.5cm) it's 75mm.
But there's an obvious problem with using the diagonal to define "normal": It depends on the aspect ratio, which varies from format to format, from time period to time period, and sometimes from camera to camera. The highly touted "four thirds" format took its name from its (by that time) unusual aspect ratio, IIRC.
An image shot at a "normal" focal length will seem neither telephoto nor wide-angle. If you perform the "angle of view" calculation with such a lens, you end up with a horizontal angle of view of roughly 45º -- which somewhat approximates about what the human eye can take in without having to "look around".
At least using the angle of view of hte human eye makes more sense than using the diagonal, as long as it's confined to one dimension - presumably the horizontal, since that's where most peripheral vision lies.
04-14-2015 11:09 PM
NO. 50 mm is considered Normal on full frame & you MULTIPLY, not divide when talking crop bodies so 30 mm X 1.6 =48 mm effectively.
04-15-2015 05:51 AM - edited 04-15-2015 05:56 AM
04-15-2015 07:38 AM
@cicopo wrote:NO. 50 mm is considered Normal on full frame & you MULTIPLY, not divide when talking crop bodies so 30 mm X 1.6 =48 mm effectively.
No, there was nothing wrong with the OP's math; division is the correct operation for the direction his computation was going. It was only his underlying assumption (that 35mm is "normal" on a FF camera) that was wrong. IOW, 50 / 1.6 = 31.25, which is "normal" on a crop camera.
04-15-2015 08:51 AM
Bob you are correct. I misinterpreted the way the question was being asked.
04-15-2015 02:54 PM - edited 04-15-2015 02:57 PM
What's been considered a "normal" or "standard" lens has varied quite a bit over the years.... from 40mm to 58 or even 60mm on a film/full frame camera.
IMO, on a crop camera a 24mm or 28mm can serve nicely as a slightly wide "normal". 30mm on crop comes the closest to the standard 50mm on full frame. But 35mm is pretty close, and 40mm is only slightly telephoto. So, pick what you like best: 24mm to 40mm range. Any of them might work.
Then all you have to do is decide how you feel about "normal". When I was shooting film, I always prefered something a little wider.... so I generally used a 35mm or 40mm as my "normal". Now using some crop cameras, Canon EF 28/1.8 USM is my "normal" lens. (The 24/1.4L would be closer to my preferred angle of view and is 2/3 stop faster. But it's also a lot bigger, heavier and more expensive.)
If you are actually looking for a moderate wide angle like 35mm on full frame, then a 20 or 21mm would serve nicely. I use the EF 20/2.8 USM and like it alot on my crop sensor cameras. It's a bit bigger than the 28/1.8, though. And 1-1/3 stop "slower".
***********
Alan Myers
San Jose, Calif., USA
"Walk softly and carry a big lens."
GEAR: 5DII, 7D(x2), 50D(x3), some other cameras, various lenses & accessories
FLICKR & PRINTROOM
04-15-2015 11:14 AM
But to the OP's actual question, the answer is, yes. If he considers a 35mm lens "normal" than 20mm will appear the same normal.
Now we can debate whether 35mm is considered normal on a full frame or not. The image diagonal for FF is 43mm. Is that normal? APS-C is 30mm. Is that normal?
My personal taste is a 28mm on a crop and 50mm on a FF. But I may not be "normal" ?
04-17-2015 12:54 AM
There's a few accepted norms of what's "normal". For a 35mm film SLR (or "full frame" DSLR) a 50mm lens is considered a "normal" angle of view. For an APS-C camera it's about 30mm. For a medium format camera (Rollei, Hasselblad, PhaseOne, etc.) it's about 80mm.
But there's a slightly more accurate math-based way to calculate "normal". The "normals" provided above are rounded values to the next highest even multiple of 10.
For any camera sensor, if you calculate the diagonal measure of the sensor (in millimeters) then that is the focal length of the lens that is considered "normal".
For a 35mm film camera (or "full frame" DSLR) the sensor measures approximately 36mm wide by 24mm tall. That works out to about 43mm. √(24^2 + 36^2)
For an APS-C DSLR, it's roughly 23mm x 15mm. That works out to just over 27mm.
For a medium format 6x6 camera (6cm x 6cm) it's 85mm.
For a medium format 645 camera (6cm x 4.5cm) it's 75mm.
An image shot at a "normal" focal length will seem neither telephoto nor wide-angle. If you perform the "angle of view" calculation with such a lens, you end up with a horizontal angle of view of roughly 45º -- which somewhat approximates about what the human eye can take in without having to "look around".
04-17-2015 08:02 AM
@TCampbell wrote:There's a few accepted norms of what's "normal". For a 35mm film SLR (or "full frame" DSLR) a 50mm lens is considered a "normal" angle of view. For an APS-C camera it's about 30mm. For a medium format camera (Rollei, Hasselblad, PhaseOne, etc.) it's about 80mm.
The usual lens on a 2¼ x 2¼ in. twin-lens reflex was 75 mm. I guess that had to be considered "normal" by definition, since very few TLRs had interchangeable lenses.
But there's a slightly more accurate math-based way to calculate "normal". The "normals" provided above are rounded values to the next highest even multiple of 10.
For any camera sensor, if you calculate the diagonal measure of the sensor (in millimeters) then that is the focal length of the lens that is considered "normal".
For a 35mm film camera (or "full frame" DSLR) the sensor measures approximately 36mm wide by 24mm tall. That works out to about 43mm. √(24^2 + 36^2)
For an APS-C DSLR, it's roughly 23mm x 15mm. That works out to just over 27mm.
For a medium format 6x6 camera (6cm x 6cm) it's 85mm.
For a medium format 645 camera (6cm x 4.5cm) it's 75mm.
But there's an obvious problem with using the diagonal to define "normal": It depends on the aspect ratio, which varies from format to format, from time period to time period, and sometimes from camera to camera. The highly touted "four thirds" format took its name from its (by that time) unusual aspect ratio, IIRC.
An image shot at a "normal" focal length will seem neither telephoto nor wide-angle. If you perform the "angle of view" calculation with such a lens, you end up with a horizontal angle of view of roughly 45º -- which somewhat approximates about what the human eye can take in without having to "look around".
At least using the angle of view of hte human eye makes more sense than using the diagonal, as long as it's confined to one dimension - presumably the horizontal, since that's where most peripheral vision lies.
04-17-2015 11:39 AM
09/26/2024: New firmware updates are available.
EOS R5 Mark II - Version 1.0.1
EOS R6 Mark II - Version 1.5.0
07/01/2024: New firmware updates are available.
04/16/2024: New firmware updates are available.
RF100-300mm F2.8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.6
RF400mm F2.8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.6
RF600mm F4 L IS USM - Version 1.0.6
RF800mm F5.6 L IS USM - Version 1.0.4
RF1200mm F8 L IS USM - Version 1.0.4
Canon U.S.A Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without permission is prohibited.