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Indeed, this has been discussed, but relevant answer is pretty deep in there.

I think for real estate, when you want rooms and house to look As Big As Possible, Full-Frame's benefit is a possibility of using wider lenses. For example, Nikon's 14mm lens has a field of view that would require non-existing 9.3mm lens to reproduce on crop sensor (d3100)

Canon has full-frame 11mm lens that produces same field of view as non-existing 6.9mm lens on crop sensor

PS: as far as I know, widest crop lens for Canon or Nikon is Sigma 98-16mm zoom, that is equivalent to 12-24mm on full-frame. You might want to give it a try.

PPS: Here we talk only about rectilinear lenses, not fisheye that can come in wider focal lengths but will create great distortion to the image (mostly for artistic purposes)

Indeed, this has been discussed, but relevant answer is pretty deep in there.

I think for real estate, when you want rooms and house to look As Big As Possible, Full-Frame's benefit is a possibility of using wider lenses. For example, Nikon's 14mm lens has a field of view that would require non-existing 9.3mm lens to reproduce on crop sensor (d3100)

Canon has full-frame 11mm lens that produces same field of view as non-existing 6.9mm lens on crop sensor

PS: as far as I know, widest crop lens for Canon or Nikon is Sigma 9-16mm zoom, that is equivalent to 12-24mm on full-frame. You might want to give it a try.

PPS: Here we talk only about rectilinear lenses, not fisheye that can come in wider focal lengths but will create great distortion to the image (mostly for artistic purposes)

Indeed, this has been discussed, but relevant answer is pretty deep in there.

I think for real estate, when you want rooms and house to look As Big As Possible, Full-Frame's benefit is a possibility of using wider lenses. For example, Nikon's 14mm lens has a field of view that would require non-existing 9.3mm lens to reproduce on crop sensor (d3100)

Canon has full-frame 11mm lens that produces same field of view as non-existing 6.9mm lens on crop sensor

PS: as far as I know, widest crop lens for Canon or Nikon is Sigma 8-16mm zoom, that is equivalent to 12-24mm on full-frame. You might want to give it a try.

PPS: Here we talk only about rectilinear lenses, not fisheye that can come in wider focal lengths but will create great distortion to the image (mostly for artistic purposes)

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Indeed, this has been discussed, but relevant answer is pretty deep in there.

I think for real estate, when you want rooms and house to look As Big As Possible, Full-Frame's benefit is a possibility of using wider lenses. For example, Nikon's 14mm lens has a field of view that would require non-existing 9.3mm lens to reproduce on crop sensor (d3100)

Canon has full-frame 11mm lens that produces same field of view as non-existing 6.9mm lens on crop sensor

PS: as far as I know, widest crop lens for Canon or Nikon is Sigma 9-16mm zoom, that is equivalent to 12-24mm on full-frame. You might want to give it a try.

PPS: Here we talk only about rectilinear lenses, not fisheye that can come in wider focal lengths but will create great distortion to the image (mostly for artistic purposes)