I am seriously considering purchasing a dedicated macro lens. I have tried extension tubes in the past, but they have been a dismal failure (quite possibly caused by the user), close focus filters are not a consideration because I will be adding more optics between the camera and subject.
I have done a bit of research to find out the differences between a macro lens and a "normal" lens. The main differences I have found are:
- Macro lenses allow you to get closer to the subject
- Macro lenses can produce a 1:1 image size (some macro's can produce greater than 1:1)
- Macro lenses have a flat focus field, versus the curved focus field of a non-macro lens. With a curved field lens, the centre of an image is in focus while the edges are soft(er). This softness is usually compensated for by using aperture to adjust your depth of field, but the effect is magnified when photographing at very close distances and when photographing two-dimensional objects. The flat field of the macro lens is designed to allow the entire image to be in focus without increasing the depth of field. (This I did not know)
I have done a comparison chart of the macro lenses available from my favourite supplier (Digital Camera Warehouse) and the Tokina AT-X 100mm f2.8 AF Pro D Macro comes out at best value. The review from Ken Rockwell is pretty impressive.
"Should you switch a macro lens to a camera with a smaller-than-full-frame sensor, an APS-C sensor for instance, the working distance of the macro lens will remain constant, but the image produced will appear magnified as the cropped sensor is capturing a smaller region in the center of the image circle—a narrower field of view by about 1.5x. For example, that Nikon 200mm macro becomes, effectively, a 300mm macro lens on a Nikon DX camera and will show the same field of view in any photograph taken with an actual 300mm macro lens on a full-frame sensor camera. This effect could make it necessary to back away from the subject in order to properly fill your frame." From Macro photography
Does the above statement mean that if I use the Tokina macro lens, which is for a full frame camera, on my 7DII, give me an image ratio of 1.6:1 instead of the 1:1 ratio it gives on a FF camera?
This will be the first of my macro related questions.
I have done a bit of research to find out the differences between a macro lens and a "normal" lens. The main differences I have found are:
- Macro lenses allow you to get closer to the subject
- Macro lenses can produce a 1:1 image size (some macro's can produce greater than 1:1)
- Macro lenses have a flat focus field, versus the curved focus field of a non-macro lens. With a curved field lens, the centre of an image is in focus while the edges are soft(er). This softness is usually compensated for by using aperture to adjust your depth of field, but the effect is magnified when photographing at very close distances and when photographing two-dimensional objects. The flat field of the macro lens is designed to allow the entire image to be in focus without increasing the depth of field. (This I did not know)
I have done a comparison chart of the macro lenses available from my favourite supplier (Digital Camera Warehouse) and the Tokina AT-X 100mm f2.8 AF Pro D Macro comes out at best value. The review from Ken Rockwell is pretty impressive.
"Should you switch a macro lens to a camera with a smaller-than-full-frame sensor, an APS-C sensor for instance, the working distance of the macro lens will remain constant, but the image produced will appear magnified as the cropped sensor is capturing a smaller region in the center of the image circle—a narrower field of view by about 1.5x. For example, that Nikon 200mm macro becomes, effectively, a 300mm macro lens on a Nikon DX camera and will show the same field of view in any photograph taken with an actual 300mm macro lens on a full-frame sensor camera. This effect could make it necessary to back away from the subject in order to properly fill your frame." From Macro photography
Does the above statement mean that if I use the Tokina macro lens, which is for a full frame camera, on my 7DII, give me an image ratio of 1.6:1 instead of the 1:1 ratio it gives on a FF camera?
This will be the first of my macro related questions.
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