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General Photography
Wild Life
Wildlife and Depth of Field
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<blockquote data-quote="STM" data-source="post: 326966" data-attributes="member: 12827"><p>Actually it does, and to a great extent. Imagine taking a photo of a woman. You start with a 28mm lens @ f/5.6 and set the distance to fill the frame. Now, put on a 180mm lens, also at f/5.6 and step back until she fills the frame the same amount. You will see a MARKED difference in depth of field. Although it seems to be left off pretty much most lenses nowadays, compare the depth of field scales on two lenses of widely varying focal lengths for the same aperture. You will see big difference.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="STM, post: 326966, member: 12827"] Actually it does, and to a great extent. Imagine taking a photo of a woman. You start with a 28mm lens @ f/5.6 and set the distance to fill the frame. Now, put on a 180mm lens, also at f/5.6 and step back until she fills the frame the same amount. You will see a MARKED difference in depth of field. Although it seems to be left off pretty much most lenses nowadays, compare the depth of field scales on two lenses of widely varying focal lengths for the same aperture. You will see big difference. [/QUOTE]
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