One way of thinking about it is that there is only a certain amount of detail resolution that a lens can provide, and if you spread it out over a larger image circle it is hard to provide the same line-pairs per millimeter at the film plane (a conceptual description, which may not be acceptably accurate description to an optical physicist/engineer). So companies like Rodenstock freely admit and publish MTF charts for large format lenses which shows exactly that!...fewer line-pairs per millimeter from LF lenses than the MTF charts for 135 format lenses.
After you take the 44 line-pairs per millimeter on 4x5 film, and enlarge it by 4X, you end up with 11 line-pairs per millimeter of 8x10" paper print; similarly 80 line-pairs per millimeter at the 135 film, after enlarged by 8.5X, results in 80 / 8.5 line-pairs or 9.4 line-pairs on 8x10" paper print.
Yes, I agree with all that. What I was querying was that thuggins said it all evens out and different formats lenses project the same number of line pairs. However you said, no, the LF comes out with twice as many line pairs as the 35mm.
You enlarge the 4x5 by a factor of 2x get to 8x10, not 4x.
My explanation is also what Rodenstock says! do you doubt their veracity?
BrainfArt! I often describe concepts in terms of the 16x20" print
differences due to ... the effects of using different focal lengths
The two photos will look different.
The larger the format, the more shallow the depth of field, assuming the same angle of view and aperture setting.
They will look different because different focal lengths have different perspectives. .
No.They will look different because different focal lengths have different perspectives.
I don't know the answer. My queries to you were not to say you are wrong - I was simply wondering about the discrepancy between your and Rodenstocks claim that LF wins (which is supported in detail here http://www.normankoren.com/Tutorials/MTF1A.html), and thuggins claim that they tie (which is supported in detail here http://www.photodo.com/topic_138.html),
Ok. With those corrected number it comes out the same as what you said before, with the LF image being about twice as detailed as 35mm when scaled to 8x10. As I noted, thuggins (and that link) say they are same level of detail when both scaled to 8x10
This is the sort of comment I was originally asking about in the original post. Good to have someone here who experiences it.
How would you describe the differences between the 105/2.4 and equivalent 35mm lenses?
Weird. So, aside from image circle, what's the difference between the 6x7 and 35mm 105s then? Can anyone explain it?
I will readily admit that the photodo testing does something which is totally UNFACTORED in my analyses so far in this thread...my analyses fail to consider actual lens MTF
Oh! Are you (and Rodenstock) talking about resultant lens+film MTF?, not lens MTF? That changes things a bit. I thought you were talking about lens MTF.
As for your comments about aspect ratio and focal length multiples, I tend to agree with you. I much prefer your idea of using a multiple of height to compare apples to apples, rather than photodods method of diagonals and "normal lenses". I think their method needlessly muddies the water with scaling effects. I don't think it would significantly alter their conclusion that large format and 35mm lens MTF is practically the same (assuming that conclusion is true), but nonetheless it's annoying. Clearly it's leading you to question their conclusions.
'If the test result by photodo is a 'practically the same' final assessment, it does make you wonder...
If they had neutralized the question of scaling differences so that subjects occupied the same frame height fraction on both formats, would the results have been more clearly in one direction?
Having done all this, I think the OP's question is, if not silly, badly posed.
That's where my knowledge stops as I'm not a lens designer but it's pretty darn apparent. Looking at the P67 Flickr group, even with all the other variables, it's a distinct look that the 105/2.4 provides.
I suspect most of us have "done all that" and seen that the same aperture on a bigger format gives less depth of field. Shallow depth of field is of course one of the reasons people go for medium format. F2 on medium format is real shallow.
My original question concerns EQUIVALENT aperture and focal length. Ie when depth of field is the same, not different.
n that case, the larger negative contains more information than the smaller. They're not the same image
The law is: depth-of-field is uniquely determined by magnification and aperture
For the third time, depth-of-field is uniquely determined by magnification and aperture. Focal length and format have nothing to do with it.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?