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Wide-Angle
I Finally Landed A Fish
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<blockquote data-quote="Steve B" data-source="post: 227213" data-attributes="member: 15754"><p>Congrats on the new lens Jake. I have a full frame fisheye for my Olympus bodies but haven't picked one up for the Nikons yet. One thing that you mentioned on your original post that sometimes gets overlooked is that there are two types of fisheye lenses, full frame and circular. A full frame has a 180 <strong>diagonal</strong> field of view (not 180 horizontal or vertical) and produces an image that covers the sensor. A circular fisheye has a 180 field of view in all directions and produces a circular image on the sensor.</p><p></p><p>Note: "full frame" in this post refers to a type of fisheye lens not to a type of camera body. The 8mm Olympus lens is a full frame fisheye lens when used on a Four Thirds (or micro Four Thirds) body.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Steve B, post: 227213, member: 15754"] Congrats on the new lens Jake. I have a full frame fisheye for my Olympus bodies but haven't picked one up for the Nikons yet. One thing that you mentioned on your original post that sometimes gets overlooked is that there are two types of fisheye lenses, full frame and circular. A full frame has a 180 [B]diagonal[/B] field of view (not 180 horizontal or vertical) and produces an image that covers the sensor. A circular fisheye has a 180 field of view in all directions and produces a circular image on the sensor. Note: "full frame" in this post refers to a type of fisheye lens not to a type of camera body. The 8mm Olympus lens is a full frame fisheye lens when used on a Four Thirds (or micro Four Thirds) body. [/QUOTE]
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I Finally Landed A Fish
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