Fisheyeadventures wrote: Hey everyone, I was considering for months to buy a full frame camera body. That's why I borrowed a similar full frame body (same amount of megapixels, same focal length) to compare it to my a 6300 showing it's benefits and disadvantages. The only change comes when you mount a APS-C lens on a full frame body or vice versa. It seems like people on the internet are confused and and keep saying APS-C lenses have a 1.5 crop ratio vs Full Frame, so for instance a 50mm APS-C lens has less a field of view compared to a 50mm Full frame lens.. but they are the same. The focal length and field of view is the same for EF and EF-S lenses on the same camera. however, when reading a lens review that was made on a FF camera, note that the overall experience of that lens on a crop camera may be different (for example, I love the 70-200 on full frame, but rarely use it on my 7D as it gets "quite long" on that camera). Nikon produces a broad selection of wide-angle prime lenses for Nikon FX (full-frame) and DX-format (APS-C) DSLRs and five wide-angle zoom lenses. Several lenses, including the latest version of the workhorse AF-S NIKKOR 24-70mm f/2.8E ED VR, begin at wide-angle but reach standard or telephoto lengths when zoomed. The depth of field and bokeh (background blur) will be approximately the same on a full frame camera with f2.8 and on an aps-c with f1.8 (on the same focal length - for examples aps-c=50mm, FF=75mm), but with the same settings (ISO+shutter speed), the aps-c+f1.8 will be slightly brighter than the FF+f2.8. Hope its kinda understandable :D. For The same reasoning applies to full frame or APS-C digital sensors. While the former is 24 x 36 mm in size, the latter is 16.7 x 25.1 mm. The lenses designed for full frame have more image circle than what is needed for an APS-C digital sensor, while the reciprocal does not apply. A full frame lens will work in APS-C but not the contrary. Let’s look at the most popular focal lengths for landscape photography lenses and discuss their benefits. - Best Landscape Lens Zoom for Full-Frame Cameras: ca. 16-35mm. - Best Landscape Lens Zoom for APS-C Cameras: ca. 10-24mm. - Best Landscape Lens Zoom for Micro Four Thirds Cameras: ca. 8-18mm. - Best Landscape Prime for Full-Frame Cameras FUJIFILM X (APS-C) FUJIFILM has an APS-C system, so you should be checking out its 23mm lenses for the 35mm look. Fortunately, the decision is quite easy, with just two options. The latest XF 23mm f/2 R WR is compact and weather resistant, while the XF 23mm f/1.4 R is obviously faster and claims better optics. Vay Tiền Nhanh Chỉ Cần Cmnd.

full frame vs aps c focal length