Earl Dunbar
Member
42mm for 35mm film.
Flotsam said:I once read an article where they went back and photographed landscapes that were painted by classical painters and they found that the perspectives, the size relationships of near and distant objects, was best replicated using a 135mm lens. Of course field of vision would have been different.
If only John Belushi had lived long enough to do The Samurai Photographer.blansky said:[...]
In martial arts there is a state in which you look and see everything ( an opponent or opponents) and look at nothing. [...]
Michael
Bentley Boyd said:Hm, Ray-bans found after thirty years , your house cleaning sounds about the same as mine.
bjorke said:
- 50mm - one eye open
- 35mm both eyesopen
Dimitri said:You all, are confusing me.
I thought the the generally accepted lens is the one giving an angle of view of about 46 degrees, which is close to the human angle of view.
This will translate to a 46mm lens in 35mm format.
(At least this is more or less the most common textbook defintion I've been accustomed to.)
Flotsam said:I think that there are two issues here, 1) field of view and 2) perspective. A 40mm lens on a 35mm camera might aproximate the field of view but the size relationship between near and far objects will be out of proportion and unnatural because of the wide angle effect.
This is just my theory, feel free to contradict it.
Flotsam said:I think that there are two issues here, 1) field of view and 2) perspective. A 40mm lens on a 35mm camera might aproximate the field of view but the size relationship between near and far objects will be out of proportion and unnatural because of the wide angle effect.
micek said:Considering that throughout history the normal (i.e. average) human perspective on things has been defined by poverty and the attempt to overcome it, I would say that the equivalent lens to the human perspective would be the lens you cannot afford and do not buy...
blansky said:I would say that the AVERAGE human perspective is not about personal self interest but about the good of the tribe, group, and/or family. If not we probably, as a species, would not have survived.
MIchael
jjstafford said:Social psychology is clearly not the object of this thread as evinced by the truly uninformed, impressionistic opinions espoused. Why not stick to the subject of physical psychology, visual perception?
Flotsam said:I'd like to find a "Beer Goggle" lens that sees the world from the perspective a guy who is sitting in a bar at 2:00 in the morning after a full night of drinking copious amounts of beer. Every woman looks like a super-model.![]()
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