If you have compared the two pictures after enlarging one of them I'll might believe it, but my eyes tell it's just a different size.
See now I'm confused. So is it the magnification?
Yes, it's the magnification.
When I read it, the statement seems to contradict itself. I need a nap.
Understanding Depth of Field in Photography
"On the other hand,
when standing in the same place and focusing on a subject at the same distance, a longer focal length lens will have a shallower depth of field (even though the pictures will show something entirely different). This is more representative of everyday use, but is an effect
due to higher magnification, not focal length."
But to get that higher magnification, you need a longer focal length lens.....
To get the higher magnification you can use a longer lens or you can get closer or you can use a larger sensor or you can use any combination of the three. In the end it's the magnification. What you don't want to do is think that it's a fixed property of the lens. The reason for the confusion is this: Many photographers first learn this equation:
DOF = f/stop + focal length. Short lenses have more DOF and long lenses have less -- fair enough.
Eventually they learn this equation:
DOF = f/stop + focal length + subject distance. But they have that idea holding on from before about short and long lenses which, although not wrong, can cause confusion.
Hopefully they eventually learn this equation:
DOF = f/stop + focal length + subject distance + sensor size. But since they're artists they're now hopelessly confused and they fail to apply one of the foundation rules of algebra: simplify to solve the equation.
Magnification = (focal length + subject distance + sensor size) and therefore:
DOF = f/stop + magnification.
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Next you get somebody come along (zicar21) who realizes that if you hold magnification constant, which by the way gives you the same content and that makes sense, then focal length and subject size drop out of the equation and hey look!! same DOF from two different focal lengths! What I first learned about short and long lenses isn't true!!
Not so fast. It's a bit more complicated than that
. You've got landscapes at infinity for one. It's just silly to say focal length doesn't effect DOF when shooting landscapes because you can't physically manipulate a 200mm lens to produce the same magnification as a 20mm with infinity in the photo.
It's still more complicated, because as I noted earlier in this thread, you've got to factor in the spatial relationship between camera to subject and subject to background distance.
And it's still more complicated because you'll next want to factor in the DOF distribution around the focal point.
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Fact: Focal length plays a roll in determining DOF.
Fact: With infinity in the photo it's a fact that a shorter lens will have a closer hyperfocal distance.
Fact: Without infinity in the photo and the magnification held constant, changing lens focal length will not significantly effect the total DOF.
Fact: Lens focal length will most certainly alter the DOF distribution as well as factor into the spatial relationship between camera/subject and subject/background distances and that will effect how blurry the background appears regardless of the total DOF.
OK now?
Joe