The list is fairly straightforward. We used three cameras: Canon 5D Mark III (full frame sensor) Fuji X-E2 (APS-C sensor with 1.5x crop factor) Olympus OM-D E-M1 (Micro Four Thirds, MFT, sensor with 2x crop factor) Now, focal length and aperture are the other two factors (besides the sensor size) that determine how your bokeh is going to look.
The difference is that on a crop sensor, each individual photosite (the tiny little sensors that detect the light for each pixel) is going to be smaller. Full Frame Cameras Are Better Quality, Especially in Low Light Related: How to Take Photos at Night (That Aren't Blurry)
A full-frame sensor’s dimensions are roughly 24 × 36 mm in size. Nikon labels its full-frame cameras as “FX” cameras. This is in comparison to the company’s smaller, 1.5× crop-sensor “DX” cameras, and extremely small 2.7× crop-sensor “CX” cameras. Currently, FX cameras have the largest sensors of any Nikon camera. The most obvious perk of using a full frame camera is that your angle of view is increased. Full frame cameras can capture more of a scene, which has huge advantages in most - but not all - types of photography. Many new cameras these days offer the ability to toggle in between full frame / crop shooting mode in camera. Full Frame & Crop Sensor Cameras. What's the Difference? Whether you are a photographer or videographer in this video I will help you make the right buying A full-frame camera is the standard; it has no crop factor. An APS-C sensor (also known as a crop sensor), has a crop factor of 1.5x (on Nikon and Sony cameras) or 1.6x (on Canon cameras). The Micro Four Thirds crop factor is even stronger: 2x. As I explained above, the crop factor affects your field of view. Look at the series of images below For example, where a 50mm lens acts like a 50mm lens on a full frame camera, on a crop sensor camera it might behave like an 80mm lens. That's a huge difference in the way the lens behaves - instead of a standard or normal field of view, you get a short telephoto field of view that has a zoomed in effect. In this video, I shoot with a full frame and crop sensor camera to compare the final images and the results are pretty surprising (Not really) From the portr OM SYSTEM OM-1 — A crop sensor camera that’s incredibly versatile. The OM SYSTEM OM-1 makes all types of photography easy thanks to its size, weight, excellent ergonomics, and autofocus system. On top of all of these features that help make the OM-1 one of the best cameras all around crop sensor cameras, OMDS gave the OM-1 IP53-rated QsQxFR.