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Full Frame Lenses and Cropped Sensor DSLRsNikon FX Lenses on DX and Canon EF Lenses on EF-S Cameras
Cropped sensor digital SLRs can use full frame lenses, but cropped lenses are normally a more practical choice.
Traditional 35mm film cameras use 36mm x 24mm sized film ("full frame", Nikon FX or Canon EF). Most DSLRs use smaller (roughly 24mm x 16mm) "cropped" image sensors (Nikon DX or Canon EF-S). Image SizeCropped DSLRs can use full frame lenses. However, because the full frame lens needs to cover the larger full frame image size (wasted on a cropped DSLR), it will have one or more disadvantages when used on a cropped DSLR:
Normal Lenses and Focal Length Sweet SpotThe easiest lenses to make (cheap, high performance), have a focal length equal to the diagonal length of the image sensor. These f1.8, f1.4 large aperture lenses are called "standard" or "normal" lenses.
The more the focal length moves away from this "sweet spot", the more difficult it is to make a large aperture lens. This is why extreme wide angles and extreme telephoto lenses are expensive and have smaller apertures. Full Frame Wide Angle Lenses on Cropped DSLRA 18mm lens on a cropped DSLR will look like a 27mm lens on a full frame DSLR (Nikon 1.5x or Canon 1.6x crop factor). Using a 18mm full frame lens on a cropped DSLR doesn't make sense.
So, image size and sweet spot issues mean that full frame wide angle lenses are not suitable for cropped DSLRs. Nikon f2.8 Wide Zoom Lens ComparisonWide angle professional level f2.8 lenses for Nikon are
Canon f2.8 Wide Zoom Lens ComparisonWide angle professional level f2.8 lenses for Canon are
Telephoto Zoom on Cropped DSLRCropped DSLRs are similarly better suited to cropped telephoto lenses. Professional level f2.8 telephoto zooms (like the Nikon and Canon 70-200mm f2.8) are not yet available in cropped format, but smaller aperture cropped telephoto zooms are. Large Aperture Prime Lens on Cropped DSLRLarge aperture prime lenses (f1.2, f1.8, f1.4, f2) are also mainly available only in full frame. Nikon does have a 35mm f1.8 DX, and Sigma makes a 30mm f1.4 DX for Nikon (and an equivalent EF-S for Canon). Upgrading to Full Frame DSLRSome cropped DSLR photographers buy full frame lenses whenever possible, hedging against the future when they might upgrade to a full frame DSLR. Especially for wide angle lenses, they would be better served with the wider, lighter, cheaper, more zoom range cropped lenses; selling them when upgrading to a full frame DSLR. Resources
The copyright of the article Full Frame Lenses and Cropped Sensor DSLRs in Digital Photography is owned by Yuen Kit Mun. Permission to republish Full Frame Lenses and Cropped Sensor DSLRs in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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