When people start talking about the effects of format on DoF they should be taking about DoF for the same image on film. A shot on "small format" has to be at lower magnification that the same shot on "large format." So, if the two shots are taken at the same aperture the "small format" shot will appear to have more DoF. If, however, the final prints from the two formats are the same size and contain the same image DoF in the final prints will be the same.
- 135 format 48mm (2 * short dimension of frame) f/5.6 focused at 5m sees area of 2.48m x 3.71m, and 20/20 vision DOF zone is 1.3m
- 4x5 format 186mm (2 * short dimension of frame) f/5.6 focused at 5m sees area 2.6m x 3.3m (not sure if the program properly uses the actual opening size of film holder), and 20/20 vision DOF zone is 0.3m
The magnifications are different. The image on 4x5 is not quite 4x as long as the image on 35 mm. Of course 4x5 will have less DoF. Its shot at higher magnification.
Tareq, you've already been told which lenses are available. From here its all up to your budget and what you want to accomplish. Good luck, have fun, buy and read the book.
But the magnification required varies significantly based on the film format.The calculations of DOF for any format are generally based upon an 8x10" final print from both images!
In the large format realm, lenses used for reproduction are optimized for close working distances and reproduction ratios around 1:1. But when those sorts of cameras were in common use it typically meant making an A4 sized image of an A4 sized subject, for example.
Those lenses and cameras weren't commonly used for doing something like enlarging a 10mm/.5 inch subject to 8x10 inches though many had enough bellows draw to do it if you wanted. The major limiting factor in large format for making life-size or bigger than life-sized images is the length of the bellows rather than whether or not it can be done optically. The reason that some here have recommended enlarging lenses for large format is that the are optimized for close working distances (relative to a typical pictorial lens), flat fields, and they are commonly and inexpensively available.
In the MF and 35mm realm you have more choices for optics that are designed to make 1:1 or bigger images of small 3 dimensional subjects. The cameras are a little easier to handle at such close distances than LF, and if your goal, for example, is to make an image of a 10mm subject that is double the original size, you can do that easily with 35mm, and there is nothing to gain by doing it in 4x5 except for a lot of wasted film area.
If you need to fill a 4x5 frame with that 10mm subject, then an enlarging lens or a reprographic lens will be somewhat better than a general purpose pictorial lens, but you can do it with ether one of you can extend the bellows far enough (and you have a LOT of light available).
But the magnification required varies significantly based on the film format.
- Leigh
Should you need greater DOF for your macro imageing might I suggest that you look into Scanning Light Photo-
macrography where the subject is 'raised-up' through a multiple narrow light beams (4 is probably best) inside a tube. The results will "blow your mind" since there is no 'restriction' on DOF due to the f-stop on the lens.
Ken
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