Mike-DT6 wrote in post #10115036
Yes it does. The further you move from the subject the greater the depth of field, assuming the same settings of course.
Example: 50D (or similar; no extension tubes) with 100mm and f/22 will give you about 0.2" depth of field with a subject distance of 12". Move back to four feet away and the depth of field is now 4.6".
Mike
Only because moving back to 4' makes the subject 1/4 the size in the frame.
If you mounted a 400mm lens and shot from 48" to capture the same 1.8" long captured area in the frame, the DOF remains 0.17"!!!
If you merely crop the first one (100mm at 4') and blow that section up, the DOF is still 0.17" What matters in DOF is how big the out of focus disks are in the final print, as the eye's ability to detect 'out of focus' is what matters. NOT how you got there (100mm at 48" cropped and enlarged vs. 400mm at 48")
[edit 5/2/10] The statements I above in this post are bogus, as they were made based upon a DOF calculator program which is NOT accurate! 