Just curious if anyone has ever gotten the full frame "Bug" and then went back to a crop camera and why?
10megapixel "I'm a little slow" 3,872 posts Likes: 5 Joined Oct 2008 Location: Surrounded by Corn and Rednecks in Indiana More info | Feb 20, 2011 18:08 | #1 Just curious if anyone has ever gotten the full frame "Bug" and then went back to a crop camera and why?
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ebann Once an ugly duckling 3,396 posts Joined Jan 2003 Location: Chimping around Brazil since 1973! (Sometimes NYC) More info | Feb 20, 2011 18:14 | #2 Yup... I had the 1D/1D2 and tried 1Ds/5D/1Ds2... then went back to 1D3. Only 1Ds3 would make me switch back but price is out of my range. The 1D3 is everything I want in a camera... fast, clean high ISO, awesome body and AF, lithium battery, 1.3x is a great compromise for range/DoF, and 10MP is more than I would ever need. But before going FF with a 1Ds3, I would seriously consider 1D4! 1.3x croppers suffers a bit in the wide end... that's the only practical CON I can say off the top of my head. Ellery Bann
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JeffreyG "my bits and pieces are all hard" More info | Feb 20, 2011 18:27 | #3 I had the 5D and I wanted a better AF system. After the 5D Mark II was announced I bought a used 1D Mark III. My personal stuff:http://www.flickr.com/photos/jngirbach/sets/
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110yd Senior Member 790 posts Likes: 35 Joined Jan 2005 More info | Feb 20, 2011 18:27 | #4 I have a buddy that shoots HS Basketball/Football, and I watched him dump his cropped bodies and buy full frame gear. We had multiple conversations about cropped bodies and the focal length of a lens. I don't think he got his head around the concept. After getting rid of the cropped bodies and going to FF, he quickly realized that the cropped sensors give you an advantage for the application he was shooting. He then switched back to cropped sensors....Expensive lesson learned. (Different tools for different tasks)
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sinjans Senior Member 659 posts Joined Jan 2010 Location: Newfoundland and Labrador More info | Feb 20, 2011 18:46 | #6 110yd wrote in post #11880950 I have a buddy that shoots HS Basketball/Football, and I watched him dump his cropped bodies and buy full frame gear. We had multiple conversations about cropped bodies and the focal length of a lens. I don't think he got his head around the concept. After getting rid of the cropped bodies and going to FF, he quickly realized that the cropped sensors give you an advantage for the application he was shooting. He then switched back to cropped sensors....Expensive lesson learned. (Different tools for different tasks) Regards, 110yd I guess he did'nt like the 1.4X extender? or longer glass? I understand the situation. I just sold my 50D for a new 5DII and notice a huge loss on reach. Will I drop FF and go back? Hell no! However I may buy a 7D for some snazzy reach as an extra body. FF for serious photography for me anyways. I shoot mostly landscape and portraits/candids. A scattered bit of soccer. I'm sure ill miss my 50D when I hit the soccer fields again
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Monito Senior Member 460 posts Likes: 2 Joined Jan 2005 Location: Halifax, NS, ex-California More info | Feb 20, 2011 21:01 | #7 Never abandoned my crop factor camera after getting my full-frame camera. I use it for backup, but also significantly for reach at the longest focal length I possess. Even when you crop the better quality more numerous pixels of the full-frame to match the crop factor camera cropping, the crop factor camera pictures are higher quality. Canon System: fullframe DSLRs, lenses. Tripods, Alien Bees.
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sinjans Senior Member 659 posts Joined Jan 2010 Location: Newfoundland and Labrador More info | Feb 21, 2011 09:42 | #8 Monito wrote in post #11881884 Another point is that the crop factor camera will give you greater depth of field when making the same photo at the same distance for the same perspective and with the same angle of view for the same composition (due to different focal lengths needed). Is this a positive thing for you or a negative?
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billposter Member 109 posts Joined Nov 2009 Location: A Scot in Sherwood Forrest More info | Feb 21, 2011 10:21 | #9 I have owned 2 FF bodies - Sony A900 and Canon 5Dii. Both times I sold them and went back to crop for reach and speed, as it suits my shooting style better. Canon 7D, 24-105mm L f/4, 70-200mm F4 L IS, Canon 100mm F2, Sigma 12-24mm, nifty fifty, 580 EXII, Elinchrom D-Lites (2) Slik tripod and bags up the ying yang
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Feb 21, 2011 10:36 | #10 Depends on your needs, I often find crop to be better for subject isolation because the entire subject is in focus.
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Feb 21, 2011 11:19 | #11 I found I wasn't using full frame to its fullest, no pun intended... Went from 50D to 1D Mk II and a 1Ds Classic to 40D and a 5D, now I am settled with 7D and a 1D Mk II... wanting a 1D Mk III... Love the EF-S 10-22 on the 7D... UWA lenses seem expensive for FF bodies... Mike
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eos1 Member 36 posts Joined Feb 2011 More info | Feb 21, 2011 11:57 | #12 I had a 500d then moved to the 5D (got a great deal at work and I just wanted a bigger body as the 500d felt cramped). Loved the camera but sadly it died. [ 1D MkIII / 35mm f2 / 24-105 f4L / 70-200 f2.8Σ ]
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snyderman Cream of the Crop 7,084 posts Likes: 8 Joined Nov 2008 Location: Wadsworth, Ohio More info | Feb 21, 2011 13:22 | #13 bcd01 wrote in post #11881007 I use both and each has its value. Bingo! I'm not sure the majority here subscribe to applying the best tool for the job! It's almost like asking a construction framer if he's gone back to a circular saw after trying a chain saw. Two different tools for two different applications. Canon 5D2 > 35L-85L-135L
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amfoto1 Cream of the Crop 10,331 posts Likes: 146 Joined Aug 2007 Location: San Jose, California More info | Feb 21, 2011 13:26 | #14 I use both FF and 1.6X crop. They serve different purposes. Alan Myers
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bobbyz Cream of the Crop 20,506 posts Likes: 3479 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Bay Area, CA More info | Feb 21, 2011 16:27 | #15 Have 5d and 1dmk2. Use both, 5d for portrait with strobes/flashes. 1dmk2 mainly for shooting sports though I also use it for portraits. Fuji XT-1, 18-55mm
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