I heard someone say that after using a parfocal lens for the first time, they would never switch back. What is a parfocal lens, how is it different from any other lens, and what are the advantages and disadvantages for photography? Would you pay extra for this or prefer it over varifocal?
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Parfocal lens is a lens which remains in focus when you change the focal length. The non-parfocal lens is called varifocal. It is very convenient to focus at the maximum focal length and change the zoom afterwards. It is more important for manual-focus lens because a well functioning auto-focus can quickly adjust the lens to keep it in focus. |
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Parfocal lenses remain in focus when you change the focal length as previously stated. They are most useful for movie/video work - it's awkward to keep having to pull focus as your zoom changes. See also 'focus breathing', where a change in the focus changes the apparent focal length slightly. Again this is something it's nice to avoid in movie/video work. In general the more you pay, the less they breathe... Lens design is always a series of trade-offs, if money, size and weight are no object you can build a lens that will be parfocal, fast and have high quality optically. So in the movie business they end up with lenses like this: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mrmitch/2185341989/in/photostream |
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A valid use case rom this article seems to be to shoot landscapes at wider aperture:
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