wiltw
Subscriber
Actually Dan, I think the advent of widely available 35mm cameras changed it first.
Even the resolutely digital shooters are used to thinking in 35mm "equivalents".
I had a strange conversation recently with someone who was presenting a mini-workshop on depth of field when I said that one had to take into account "sensor" size/magnification.
Most digital shooters have the '35mm equivalents' way of thinking for two reasons...
- The manufacturers first came out with small APS sensor dSLRs because 24x36mm sensors were too expensive/not viable affordably, so to allow 135 shooters to think quickly in the smaller format, they had to invent the '35mm equivalent'.
- All the wide variety of sizes of 'dinky sensor' P&S cameras with zoom lenses made it far too difficult for 135 P&S shooters to think about FL except in the context of 'what I used to use on my 135 formal film P&S'
Before then, film shooters simply 'understood' the shooting of different format sizes, and learned to naturally pick up a certain lens without the 'crop factor' gymnastics.
Digital screwed that all up, simply because everyone was used to shooting 35mm film cameras, and the digital sensor sizes were all over the place (but not 135 format-sized, 10 years ago!)
If you think of it, any P&S shooter was largely blind to what FL they were shooting at...it was NOT displayed on the camera! So '35mm equivalent' was a totally irrelevant concept to their experiences! And a smartphone shooter has zero context for '35mm equivalent', too. So the only people for whom it has relevance is the 'hardcore traditional SLR film shooter', but most of those people who would move to APS-C digital from film have already done so! So the only reason for the term are the APS-C digital shooters wanting to upgrade to FF sensors. No one else in the world really cares, nor needs to care about '35mm equivalent'
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