What is the equivalent of an 85mm on a crop sensor?
To get an equivalent field of view from a crop sensor camera while still having a similar field of view as an 85mm lens on a full-frame sensor, you would need a 56mm lens. 56×1.5x = 84mm, which is close enough.
What is a normal lens for a camera with a cropped sensor?
A standard lens on a cropped sensor would need to be about 35mm (guessing). If I view a scene through the viewfinder at 50mm on a cropped sensor camera and keep my other eye open to view the scene naturally the images overlap, indicating that the view through the lens has a “natural” perspective.
Is a 50mm lens equivalent to 75mm on an APS-C sensor?
So the field of view a 50mm would have on a full frame all these years is equivelant to 75mm on APS-C sensors, right? No, you have the sensors reversed. The field of view that a 50mm lens has on a APS-C (DX) sensor camera is equivalent to a 75mm lens on a full frame (FX) sensor camera.
What is the equivalent of an 85mm lens on a crop sensor?
So, anything between 50mm to 60mm would be close to get the equivalent of a 85mm lens on crop sensor body. (85mm/1.5 crop factor = 56.67 or 85mm/1.6 factor = 53.13) But remember, just because we found an equivalent mathematically, it doesn’t mean that you’ll get the same image.
What is the difference between a full frame and APS-C camera?
(We multiply because the full-frame sensor is 1.6 times bigger than the APS-C sized sensor.) So essentially this means that if you have a full-frame and an APS-C camera side by side, you need a longer focal length lens on the full-frame camera to see the same view as the APS-C camera.
What is the field of view on a 50mm lens equivalent to?
The field of view that a 50mm lens has on a APS-C (DX) sensor camera is equivalent to a 75mm lens on a full frame (FX) sensor camera.