Canon Digital Photography Forums  

P.O.T.N. SUPPORT SHOP IS OPEN, check it out now!

Go Back   Canon Digital Photography Forums > 'Equipment Talk' section > Canon G-series Digital Cameras
Register Rules FAQ Members List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read



Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 27th of October 2004 (Wed)   #1
jimsolt
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Palm Beach County, FL
Posts: 758
Default What is Infinity -- Photographically, not Philosophically?

Experimenting with manual focus on G6. In some situations, it is difficult to see a focus change between a person and his background (as on a stage). The focus "guide" on my LCD reaches infinity fairly quickly. The manual says this scale is only a guide, but it raises questions about exactly what means of focusing will be more reliable. How far away is infinity?
Some options are "landscape mode", "manual trying to see the focus change". "manual using infinity as guide", or if it is clear of foreground material, "auto." Or none of the above.
Any tips on the most reliable method. Thanks.
jimsolt is offline   Reply With Quote
This ad block will go away when you log in as member
Old 27th of October 2004 (Wed)   #2
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default

Infinity is the point where the rays of light coming from your subject are practically parallel through your lens. Infinity is the distance where you lose the parallax movement that you get when you move your camera. Basically if you see a mountain or a house in the far off distance, then you moving your camera a foot to the right or a foot to the left will not change the look (focus sharpness, relative placement of object in viewfinder) you get through your camera (assuming your at wide angle).

With a digicam which has such great depth of field due to its small sensor size, you hit the "infinity" point pretty quickly. On a camera like a G3, infinity can be used for objects maybe 10 meters and beyond in the wide angle mode. The human eye has an optical infinity of about 6 meters.

I am an engineer and should be able to give you a better definition using optical terms, but this is how I understand it, and I've forgotten the optics I studied 12 years ago.

Hope this helps. A couple of the other regulars will chime in with better answers I am sure...
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 27th of October 2004 (Wed)   #3
timmyquest
User is banned from forums
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Outside of Chicago
Posts: 4,178
Default

Thanks x3 !
timmyquest is offline   Reply With Quote
This ad block will go away when you log in as member
Old 27th of October 2004 (Wed)   #4
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default

Sorry about that. I don't know what happened?
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31st of October 2004 (Sun)   #5
jimsolt
Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Palm Beach County, FL
Posts: 758
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pradeep1

With a digicam which has such great depth of field due to its small sensor size, you hit the "infinity" point pretty quickly. On a camera like a G3, infinity can be used for objects maybe 10 meters and beyond in the wide angle mode. The human eye has an optical infinity of about 6 meters.

I am an engineer and should be able to give you a better definition using optical terms, but this is how I understand it, and I've forgotten the optics I studied 12 years ago. :oops:
Let's deal with the part I "understand." I'll just accept the small sensor size because you sound like you're sure of it. And I'll go along with the wide angle mode, but can you explain or tell me more about this? I'm dealing with the exact opposite situation. I'm using a teleconverter fully zoomed in (optically). At what distance approximately would I hit infinity in this configuration?

Thanks for your help.
jimsolt is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31st of October 2004 (Sun)   #6
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default

Don't know. Run a test. Put the camera on a tripod. Put camera in manual focus. Aim at objects that are approximately known distances, manually focus until they are in focus (on the LCD at least). Snap the picture. Go from objects ranging from 10 ft. away to 30 ft. away to 100 ft. away with your lens fully zoomed in. Once you've taken the pictures, come back to your computer look at them. You should be able to make out the point where "infinity" starts.

Of course, this will also be effected by what aperture size you use.

Just ran a quick experiment. I seem to hit infinity at about 20 ft. at f/4 when fully zoomed in.
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31st of October 2004 (Sun)   #7
4walls
Senior Member
 
4walls's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,412
Default

Do you know what the sensor size is on the G3?
Actually, not the actual sensor but the magnification factor to make it
equivalent to 35mm.
4walls is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31st of October 2004 (Sun)   #8
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 4walls
Do you know what the sensor size is on the G3?
Actually, not the actual sensor but the magnification factor to make it
equivalent to 35mm.
The focal length of the lens is 7.2 mm to 28.8 mm. It has an equivalent of 35-140mm when converted over to 35mm standard frame.

So the magnifaction factor is 4.86 (7.2 X 4.8 = 35, 28.8 X 4.8 = 140).
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 31st of October 2004 (Sun)   #9
4walls
Senior Member
 
4walls's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,412
Default

Are you still using the G3? I have not spent much time in this area lately, been
mostly in the SHARE PHOTOS section.
4walls is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 1st of November 2004 (Mon)   #10
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by 4walls
Are you still using the G3? I have not spent much time in this area lately, been
mostly in the SHARE PHOTOS section.
Yes, still using it. Too poor to afford a 20D at this time.
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2nd of November 2004 (Tue)   #11
4walls
Senior Member
 
4walls's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,412
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by pradeep1

Yes, still using it. Too poor to afford a 20D at this time.
OK, I know how that feels.
4walls is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9th of November 2004 (Tue)   #12
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default

4walls...do you have an answer to the original question?
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14th of March 2005 (Mon)   #13
MiG82
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Posts: 319
Default Re: What is Infinity -- Photographically, not Philosophically?

Optically, infinity is any distance where the focusing error (when focused at inifinity) is small enough to not be noticable. Not noticable could be due to: your vision, lens resolution limit, CCD resolution limit, diffraction limit (an unavoidable fact of physics, which is dependant on imaging device size and the wavelength you are capturing.).

Regardless of the quality of the optical system and the viewer's fussiness, the diffraction limit is always present. So perfect focus is always achievable because diffraction will overtake the focusing error at some point.

Edited: Typo and:
I disagree about the parallax error disappearing because the explanation is not general enough. For example, a small aperture (same size sensor) can give you sharp focus mere meters away when focused at infinity. However, moving the camera from side to side will most deffinitely change the picture at such a small distance.

Last edited by MiG82 : 14th of March 2005 (Mon) at 21:01.
MiG82 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14th of March 2005 (Mon)   #14
kraterz
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 233
Default Re: What is Infinity -- Photographically, not Philosophically?

There is another point to consider. Some lenses are manufactured to be able to focus past infinity. While there is theoretically nothing past infinity, such lenses used to be made to accomodate expansion and contraction of the lens materials due to extreme cold and heat, which cause a shift in the infinity focusing point.
kraterz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15th of March 2005 (Tue)   #15
pradeep1
Goldmember
 
pradeep1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgia, USA
Posts: 2,317
Default Re: What is Infinity -- Photographically, not Philosophically?

Quote:
Originally Posted by kraterz
There is another point to consider. Some lenses are manufactured to be able to focus past infinity. While there is theoretically nothing past infinity, such lenses used to be made to accomodate expansion and contraction of the lens materials due to extreme cold and heat, which cause a shift in the infinity focusing point.
But I don't think the G6 is advanced enough to do that.
__________________
Pradeep Satyaprakash

Please view my portfolio.
pradeep1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Infinity stc9357 Wildlife 2 28th of January 2007 (Sun) 17:02
Infinity Kastner89 Urban Life & Travel 1 16th of January 2007 (Tue) 21:35
To Infinity and Beyond yhpargotohp People 5 19th of June 2006 (Mon) 09:11
Infinity Tempura Canon EOS Digital Cameras 32 26th of April 2006 (Wed) 10:38
more than infinity? Patrick DR Canon EF and EF-S Lenses 4 17th of May 2005 (Tue) 19:28


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 21:59.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.12
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
This forum is not affiliated with Canon in any way and is run as a free user helpsite by Pekka Saarinen, Helsinki Finland. You will need to register in order to be able to post messages. Cookies are required for registering and posting. HTML in messages is not allowed, plain website addresses are automatically made active by the board.