TCampbell
Been spending a lot of time on here!
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2012
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You may want to clarify the instructions with your instructor. Normally, when we discuss "1:1" image scale in photography, we're talking about the size of the object on the CAMERA SENSOR and not the object size on the computer screen. That's a huge difference.
Let's just assume your instructions were correct and your instructor did mean the computer screen (which would be odd, but we'll go with this idea for now.) The resolution accepted for monitors is generally 72 dpi (dots per inch). HOWEVER... most modern monitors have surpassed that by quite a bit. My own monitor is doing just slightly over 100 dpi. You'd need to use an editing program (e.g. photoshop) to resize the photo based on this. For example... suppose you snapped a product photo of your mobile phone. Let's suppose the mobile phone is 5" tall. Based on a 100 dpi monitor resolution (or whatever dpi you're working with) you'd resize the image so that the area phone itself occupies 500 lines from top to bottom (not the full image size... just the phone. So if the full image had an extra 1" margin above and below the phone you'd need to account for that.)
HOWEVER... I suspect you mis-heard your instructor and when he/she asks you to get an image at "1:1" scale, he/she is really talking about macro photography. In macro photography, the image size on the CAMERA SENSOR is the same size as the object in real life.
Let's use a €0.01 coin as an example:
The coin has a diameter which measures 16.3mm. Your Nikon D7000 has an APS-C size sensor which measures 23.6mm x 15.6mm.
That means that if you were to take a photo of this coin at 1:1 scale, the count would fit horizontally (with room to spare) but it wouldn't actually fit in the image vertically... the coin is .7mm larger than the height of the sensor -- so you'd slightly clip off the top & bottom of the coin.
After taking such a photo, when you display it on the computer screen, the coin will be huge!
There are numerous ways to take close-up photos. The highest quality method is to use a true 1:1 scale macro lens (be careful, because lots of lenses advertised as "macro" can't really do 1:1 scale... generally if it's a "zoom" lens that also claims to be a "macro" lens then it's not really a 1:1 scale lens. But usually the prime (non-zoom) lenses that claim to be "macro" are 1:1 scale (I do know of a few exceptions so you still have to be careful.)
You can buy close-up diopters. These are generally single-element lenses that thread onto the end of the camera lens. While they do let you get closer, the single-element design has drawbacks. If you've ever used a simple magnifying glass to look at the text on the pages of a book, you might notice that the center is magnified, but the edges show color fringing around the edges of the letters (even though the print is supposed to be black print on a white page.) The color "fringing" is caused by the dispersion (chromatic aberration) of the edges of the lens behaving like a prism and splitting light into it's constituent wavelengths. Close-up diopters are generally very inexpensive.
You can use "extension tubes". These are simple hollow barrels. You attach the extension tube to the camera body, then attach the lens to the other end of the extension tube. By moving the entire lens farther from the camera you are effectively reducing the closest focusing distance allowed by the lens and creating a larger image (actually they reduce the entire focusing range -- the lens will generally not be able to focus out to "infinity" when attached to an extension tube). There is no glass or lens element of any kind in an extension tube -- they are completely hollow (nothing but air inside). Since there are no lenses, there's no degradation of optical quality (well... that's not entirely true... lenses are technically optimized for a specific back-focus distance.) Let's just say the degradation would be minimal -- especially when compared to "close-up" diopters. Extension tubes also tend to be very inexpensive because of their simplicity (they usually do have electronic contacts so that they do pass the camera's communication pins through to the lens.)
You can also use a "reversing ring". This simple little gadget is a ring that has the camera's bayonet style mount on one side of the ring, and camera lens "filter" threads on the other side. So screw it on to the FRONT side of your lens (as though you were attaching a filter.) You now have a bayonet mount on the FRONT of your lens. Turn the lens around and connect it to your camera body. The downside is that since the lens is mounted backwards, you have no control over it. You manually focus it. You can't control the f-stop.
Back up at the top, I mentioned using a true "1:1" macro lens. With that option there are no compromises. You have full control of everything. The auto-focus works. The f-stop works. You don't have optical compromises. You get to use the full focal range of the lens. BUT... while this is certainly the most fully-functional / least compromises path, it's also the most expensive.
If you were really doing macro work seriously, then get the true macro lens. For a class project, use one of the other methods (especially since students are supposed to be poor & starving and not enough money to buy gear.)
Let's just assume your instructions were correct and your instructor did mean the computer screen (which would be odd, but we'll go with this idea for now.) The resolution accepted for monitors is generally 72 dpi (dots per inch). HOWEVER... most modern monitors have surpassed that by quite a bit. My own monitor is doing just slightly over 100 dpi. You'd need to use an editing program (e.g. photoshop) to resize the photo based on this. For example... suppose you snapped a product photo of your mobile phone. Let's suppose the mobile phone is 5" tall. Based on a 100 dpi monitor resolution (or whatever dpi you're working with) you'd resize the image so that the area phone itself occupies 500 lines from top to bottom (not the full image size... just the phone. So if the full image had an extra 1" margin above and below the phone you'd need to account for that.)
HOWEVER... I suspect you mis-heard your instructor and when he/she asks you to get an image at "1:1" scale, he/she is really talking about macro photography. In macro photography, the image size on the CAMERA SENSOR is the same size as the object in real life.
Let's use a €0.01 coin as an example:
The coin has a diameter which measures 16.3mm. Your Nikon D7000 has an APS-C size sensor which measures 23.6mm x 15.6mm.
That means that if you were to take a photo of this coin at 1:1 scale, the count would fit horizontally (with room to spare) but it wouldn't actually fit in the image vertically... the coin is .7mm larger than the height of the sensor -- so you'd slightly clip off the top & bottom of the coin.
After taking such a photo, when you display it on the computer screen, the coin will be huge!
There are numerous ways to take close-up photos. The highest quality method is to use a true 1:1 scale macro lens (be careful, because lots of lenses advertised as "macro" can't really do 1:1 scale... generally if it's a "zoom" lens that also claims to be a "macro" lens then it's not really a 1:1 scale lens. But usually the prime (non-zoom) lenses that claim to be "macro" are 1:1 scale (I do know of a few exceptions so you still have to be careful.)
You can buy close-up diopters. These are generally single-element lenses that thread onto the end of the camera lens. While they do let you get closer, the single-element design has drawbacks. If you've ever used a simple magnifying glass to look at the text on the pages of a book, you might notice that the center is magnified, but the edges show color fringing around the edges of the letters (even though the print is supposed to be black print on a white page.) The color "fringing" is caused by the dispersion (chromatic aberration) of the edges of the lens behaving like a prism and splitting light into it's constituent wavelengths. Close-up diopters are generally very inexpensive.
You can use "extension tubes". These are simple hollow barrels. You attach the extension tube to the camera body, then attach the lens to the other end of the extension tube. By moving the entire lens farther from the camera you are effectively reducing the closest focusing distance allowed by the lens and creating a larger image (actually they reduce the entire focusing range -- the lens will generally not be able to focus out to "infinity" when attached to an extension tube). There is no glass or lens element of any kind in an extension tube -- they are completely hollow (nothing but air inside). Since there are no lenses, there's no degradation of optical quality (well... that's not entirely true... lenses are technically optimized for a specific back-focus distance.) Let's just say the degradation would be minimal -- especially when compared to "close-up" diopters. Extension tubes also tend to be very inexpensive because of their simplicity (they usually do have electronic contacts so that they do pass the camera's communication pins through to the lens.)
You can also use a "reversing ring". This simple little gadget is a ring that has the camera's bayonet style mount on one side of the ring, and camera lens "filter" threads on the other side. So screw it on to the FRONT side of your lens (as though you were attaching a filter.) You now have a bayonet mount on the FRONT of your lens. Turn the lens around and connect it to your camera body. The downside is that since the lens is mounted backwards, you have no control over it. You manually focus it. You can't control the f-stop.
Back up at the top, I mentioned using a true "1:1" macro lens. With that option there are no compromises. You have full control of everything. The auto-focus works. The f-stop works. You don't have optical compromises. You get to use the full focal range of the lens. BUT... while this is certainly the most fully-functional / least compromises path, it's also the most expensive.
If you were really doing macro work seriously, then get the true macro lens. For a class project, use one of the other methods (especially since students are supposed to be poor & starving and not enough money to buy gear.)