Barring a few exceptions, lenses that are made for MFT and APS-C sensor size tend to be substantially more expensive than their full-frame twin. And this is even more starkly visible when the original FF lens has a small aperture value. Any full-frame lens which has a sub f/2 aperture value needs to be at least f/1 or less for an MFT system

22. 61. 27. While it is generally recommended to use a full-frame lens on a full-frame camera, there are situations where using an APS-C lens is not such a bad idea. The larger sensor size of a full-frame camera ensures that you capture more light, which translates to less noise and more detail in your pictures.

I thought the field of view would be the same whether that lens is on an APS-C A6600 body or the full frame A7C body set to crop mode. I understand that using a full frame lens on the A7C in crop mode will increase the focal length by a factor or 1.5x but not when using an APS-C lens. Maybe I am mistaken.
When talking about crop factors and lens equivalencies in the real world, its common for people to say "35mm equivalent" instead of "full frame equivalent". In fact full frame refers to the frame size of 35mm film. So the two phrases can be considered the same. 1.3x Crop Factor. A 28mm lens on a camera with a crop factor of 1.3x, has a 35mm The Crop Factor for an APS-C sensor is either 1.6x (Canon) or 1.5x (most others). What this means is that if you use a 50mm lens on an APS-C camera, it will have the same Field of View as a 75mm lens (50 x 1.5) on a full frame camera. The crop factor on 4/3 sensors is 2x, so a 25mm lens on a 4/3 or Micro 4/3 camera will have the same field of
This depends on the APS-C size. Most use 1.5x crop while Canon uses 1.6x crop. You multiply the focal length by either 1.6 or 1.5. But this is only if you mount a Full frame lens to a APS-C crop. I can't tell if you are mixing it up, or genuinely wanting to put a APS-C lens on a full frame camera body.
Cameras with APS-C sensors are traditionally favored by street photographers, landscape shooters, or anyone who can't justify the cost or overall weight of a full-frame camera.
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  • full frame to aps c lens conversion