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General Photography
Portrait
How your lens selection controls portrait outcome
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 542061" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>Since when do we suddenly change the previous use of "perspective" into "point of view"?</p><p></p><p>Isn't that what I said: your focal length defines how much perspective you see in your shot and in the end is responsible for differences in perspective? </p><p></p><p>It's focal length that affects it since focal length defines which distance we have to pick. Focal length in combination with a particular sensor. </p><p></p><p>If I have a 50mm on my FX and want a particular scene framed in a particular way, I can't randomly decide where I want to stand and make my 50mm fit. </p><p></p><p>If I put that 50mm on my crop, I again have to readjust my distance if I want the same scene.</p><p></p><p>My field/angle of view (degrees) limits me in how much I can frame of a particular something which forces the distance I pick.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 542061, member: 31330"] Since when do we suddenly change the previous use of "perspective" into "point of view"? Isn't that what I said: your focal length defines how much perspective you see in your shot and in the end is responsible for differences in perspective? It's focal length that affects it since focal length defines which distance we have to pick. Focal length in combination with a particular sensor. If I have a 50mm on my FX and want a particular scene framed in a particular way, I can't randomly decide where I want to stand and make my 50mm fit. If I put that 50mm on my crop, I again have to readjust my distance if I want the same scene. My field/angle of view (degrees) limits me in how much I can frame of a particular something which forces the distance I pick. [/QUOTE]
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How your lens selection controls portrait outcome
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