I want to make macro photos of lashes like this:
Now i have good offer for 100mm macro lens, that can focus from 40 cm. Would it be sufficient or i need lens that can focus closer for pictures like that? I'm using fullframe camera.
LittleMole Hatchling 5 posts Joined Aug 2012 More info | Aug 05, 2012 16:35 | #1 I want to make macro photos of lashes like this: Now i have good offer for 100mm macro lens, that can focus from 40 cm. Would it be sufficient or i need lens that can focus closer for pictures like that? I'm using fullframe camera.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Randi Goldmember 1,106 posts Joined Dec 2009 Location: St. Louis, MO. More info | Aug 05, 2012 16:41 | #2 Per the EXIF, that photo was taken with an 100mm f/2.8.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Aug 05, 2012 16:51 | #3 Yes, but it was taken by 500D that is not fullframe, so there is crop-factor and I'm not sure, if I can make the same photo with fullframe camera, if that lens allow you to go closer.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Hermes Goldmember 2,375 posts Joined Mar 2006 Location: London, UK More info | Aug 05, 2012 16:55 | #4 That can be done with a 100mm macro, any other true macro lens or a decent quality prime lens (85mm.1.8 for example) and a full set of Kenko extension tubes.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Winwin Senior Member 702 posts Likes: 3 Joined Mar 2011 Location: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada More info | Aug 05, 2012 16:56 | #5 100mm Macro, 60mm Macro, Or a lens with extention tubes. Win.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Snydremark my very own Lightrules moment More info | Aug 05, 2012 16:57 | #6 The " crop factor" has zero bearing on what you are talking about; yes, the 100mm macro will do shots like that for you. - Eric S.: My Birds/Wildlife
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Madweasel Cream of the Crop 6,224 posts Likes: 61 Joined Jun 2006 Location: Fareham, UK More info | Aug 05, 2012 16:58 | #7 It would still be possible on FF, but you would be nearer to the minimum focusing distance. The 100/2.8 macro will allow you to go to 1:1 reproduction at the sensor, so the full field at 1:1 will be 24mm x 36mm on FF. Plus, you can always crop it a bit more afterwards. Mark.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Aug 05, 2012 17:02 | #8 But lens that I'm about to buy can focus from 40 cm, not from 30 cm like Canon EF 100mm f/2,8 Macro. Will it be a problem?
LOG IN TO REPLY |
sploo premature adulation More info | Aug 05, 2012 17:26 | #9 LittleMole wrote in post #14818192 But lens that I'm about to buy can focus from 40 cm, not from 30 cm like Canon EF 100mm f/2,8 Macro. Will it be a problem? The important question isn't as to how close a lens can focus, but its maximum magnification ratio. Camera, some lenses, too little time, too little talent
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Aug 05, 2012 17:42 | #10 Yeah, I finally understand it. Tomorrow i will buy that 100mm lens. Thank you all guys (especially sploo)!!
LOG IN TO REPLY |
snake0ape Goldmember More info | Aug 06, 2012 01:47 | #11 LittleMole wrote in post #14818154 Yes, but it was taken by 500D that is not fullframe, so there is crop-factor and I'm not sure, if I can make the same photo with fullframe camera, if that lens allow you to go closer. I think some one says you can get close enough with FF. 5Diii | 50D | 8-15L 4| 16-35L 2.8 II| 24-70L 2.8 II | 70-200L 2.8 IS II |Tamy 150-600 | Σ35Art 1.4 | 40 2.8 | Σ50Art 1.4 | 85L 1.2 II | 100 2.8 Macro | Helios 44-3 58mm f2.0 |Helios 40-1 85mm f1.5 | 1.4x & 2x teleconverters
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Lowner "I'm the original idiot" 12,924 posts Likes: 18 Joined Jul 2007 Location: Salisbury, UK. More info | Aug 06, 2012 02:36 | #12 I am told that all macro lenses will do 1:1 (lifesize), its only the field of view that varies and that really only affects backgrounds. How true that is I'm not thr right person to judge. Richard
LOG IN TO REPLY |
sploo premature adulation More info | Aug 06, 2012 03:22 | #13 LittleMole wrote in post #14818311 Yeah, I finally understand it. Tomorrow i will buy that 100mm lens. Thank you all guys (especially sploo)!! You're welcome snake0ape wrote in post #14819913 ...What needs to be considered here is the DOF... Using http://www.dofmaster.com/dofjs.html Lowner wrote in post #14819992 I am told that all macro lenses will do 1:1 (lifesize), its only the field of view that varies and that really only affects backgrounds. How true that is I'm not thr right person to judge. Naturally I'd go for a longer focal length macro so I was shooting from slightly further away. As snake0ape says, DoF is the big problem, no matter which lens it is. f/16 is really the limit, any wider and DoF is so thin as to be non existant. I think there are some 50mm 'macro' lenses that are actually only 1:2 (i.e. half life sized). But, with pretty much any lens you can add extension tubes to reduce the minimum focussing distance and thus increasing magnification. As you say, the longer focal lengths allow more distance to the subject, so I'd expect a 50mm 1:2 macro with enough extension to get to 1:1 may have very little working room. Camera, some lenses, too little time, too little talent
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Lowner "I'm the original idiot" 12,924 posts Likes: 18 Joined Jul 2007 Location: Salisbury, UK. More info | Aug 06, 2012 05:53 | #14 sploo wrote in post #14820053 Remember though that DOF is very theoretical, and based on acceptable sharpness for a certain sized print viewed at a certain distance by a person with good eyesight (can't remember the defaults off the top of my head). If you were planning on printing huge, then you'd need more DOF to maintain apparent sharpness. That may be true with normal images, but my admittedly limited macro experience is that once outside that DoF, the blurring is immediate and pretty total. And we also know everyone peers closely at interesting images. Richard
LOG IN TO REPLY |
sploo premature adulation More info | Aug 06, 2012 07:37 | #15 Lowner wrote in post #14820273 That may be true with normal images, but my admittedly limited macro experience is that once outside that DoF, the blurring is immediate and pretty total. And we also know everyone peers closely at interesting images. I think the issue is that "that DoF" is the depth that's considered to be acceptably in focus (so, yes, anything outside the DOF region would be soft). I don't know how the sharpness falls off as you move away from the focus point though (whether it's linear or some form of bell curve) - or even if it changes shape depending on the focus distance. Camera, some lenses, too little time, too little talent
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member was a spammer, and banned as such! 2762 guests, 151 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||