Sirius Glass
Subscriber
I agree with Ralph always use a tripod or some other way to steady the camera whenever possible. Since some thumbs are steadier than others their rules sometimes don't work.
Are you thumbing your nose at the rule?

I agree with Ralph always use a tripod or some other way to steady the camera whenever possible. Since some thumbs are steadier than others their rules sometimes don't work.
When shooting with my Leica + 50mm lens I know that using 125th of a second I always get good sharp shots, there's no mirror to bounce.
Since the final print size is typically unknown, or could change in the future, it is common to make sure that camera shake is below the CoC. That's why I used it as a criterion in my posts.
No it doesn't make any more sense, have a coffee wake up
It's entirely possible to get sharp images at slower speeds, just less likely, and there's to many variables. It depends how you're standing, holding the camera, type of cameras etc.
When shooting with my Leica + 50mm lens I know that using 125th of a second I always get good sharp shots, there's no mirror to bounce.
It's just a very loose rule of thumb, no more than that.
Ian
Steve, I can handhold any of my cameras at a half second and consistently get images that look as sharp as those with the camera mounted on a tripod.
If I stand far enough back when I look at them.![]()
critically sharp handheld punctures
Is it really dependent on focal length? The coc isn't. So I try to keep the shutter speed at 1/250 or less for critically sharp handheld punctures regardless of focal length.
I did my own test using APS sized *cough digital cough*. Turns out, I have to use roughly 1/(2*F) or even a bit more to get really sharp results. The difference was obvious at 200mm and noticeable at 35mm.
I'm not yet sure how this translates to 35mm film, but my guess is it's the same. The reason is that APS is just cropped image -
so if I take the same picture with film, scan it at high res and crop it to the APS size i should get the same image, right? If you take into account that film has (so I heard) ~ "20 mpixels" and APS is 1/2 the area, that's exactly 10mpixels, which is what my digital has - and that's why I think it should be the same.
After thinking about it a bit more, I'm not so sure that it really is a 35mm rule. I remember my Dad teaching me this rule at a time when we used nothing but medium-format cameras. Could it be that the rule is an older medium-format rule of thumb and was carelessly carried over to 35mm?.
arpinum
It's not worth the effort. Do the math, the relationship is almost linear.
Thank you for saving me the effort of posting the same. Trigonometry is based on ratios and the scaling in the Rule of Thumb is based on ratios. Both are linear.
Steve
I did the math, that's why I found and reported that its not worth varying the rule based on focal length. Yes they are both ratios. But tangent is not linear. The rule works well because tangent is close to linear over most regular fields of view. Fisheyes however are on a non-linear section of the tangent curve compared to other lenses. Here the rule can break down by a stop.
Rules are meant to be broken, so watch out for your thumb, it too can be broken.
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