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I am trying to understand what is the deal with "full-frame" and what difference it makes, so did a silly test:

I sat at my bed and aligned the iPhone 6 camera with the door of the room and took a picture... then aligned my full frame camera with its prime 35mm lens and took the same shot, and compared the area that is covered in both pics. And actually, the iPhone 6 covered a little more.

So now I am confused. Can someone please explain what is happening? Does that mean the room is small, and for that distance the 35mm is acting more of a zoom lens that the iPhone? and if I go outside in an open area and do the test, I can see the difference?

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6 Answers 6

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You're right that the angle of view of the iPhone camera is a little bit wider than a 35mm lens on a full-frame film camera. Up until this point, you're not really confused. But the part after that, about the small room and zoom and distance — definitely confused. :)

"Zoom" means the ability to change the field of view — it isn't magnification. See What is the difference between a telephoto lens and a zoom lens? or How do zoom, magnification, and focal length relate? for more. Your 35mm prime lens (by definition, since it is a prime lens) does not zoom, so the angle of view does not change. Moving outdoors won't affect that. The iPhone also has a prime lens, but a smaller one, with a much shorter focal length — but, because the imaging area (the sensor) is also much smaller, the field of view captured is also much smaller — to the point where we call the lenses "equivalent" for the different sensor sizes.

Hopefully this diagram will make things more clear:

focal length comparison

Based on the specs I found online the focal length should actually be a little different, but that's just details. The key thing you can see here is that even though the lens and sensor pairs are different sizes, they form (roughly) equivalent angles. That means it doesn't matter what you're pointing at — they'll roughly get the same field of view (with, as you observed, the iPhone showing just a little bit more).

Imagine moving the blue line up so that it's at the 4.15mm focal length, same as the red iPhone line. Redraw the blue dotted lines from the edges of that through the point, and you can see that if you somehow used that lens on your bigger sensor, it would result in a very wide angle. (There's an added complication in that the iPhone lens isn't designed to cover that whole full-frame area with its image circle, because it doesn't need to, and in fact it would be practically impossible to make a 4.15mm lens which did, but in the world of theory, that's an entirely separate issue. It's only the part of the image cone which is recorded which matters.)

Or, imagine moving the red line down, using a true 35mm lens with the iPhone sensor. This would result in a very narrow cone.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Just out of interest, do you know the focal length of the iPhone 6 and do you know it's "equivalent" focal length? \$\endgroup\$
    – BBking
    Commented Dec 17, 2014 at 3:50
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    \$\begingroup\$ @BBking According to the internet, 4.8mm sensor width and 4.15mm focal length, but that works out to a 31mm equivalent, and other sources are saying 29mm. But, that's probably excess precision — it's 30mm-ish. \$\endgroup\$
    – mattdm
    Commented Dec 17, 2014 at 4:09
  • \$\begingroup\$ I was under the impression that a "full frame" camera also means it can cover "more" of a picture than a non-full-frame camera if everything else is set the same...looks like there are many concepts I should study again to understand the difference. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Dec 17, 2014 at 4:15
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    \$\begingroup\$ In this case, everything is not set the same: you are using the tiny 4mm iPhone lens instead of your DSLR's 35mm lens. If you could put a 4mm lens on your full-frame camera (you can't, because of physical constraints), it would be very wide angle, covering much more of the scene. \$\endgroup\$
    – mattdm
    Commented Dec 17, 2014 at 4:16
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    \$\begingroup\$ @user1899082: "full frame" isn't to do with how much of a scene the camera can capture. It's to do with sensor size only. A "full frame" sensor has a sensor approximately the same size that an old analogue film camera (not necessarily an SLR) exposed onto 35mm film. Full-frame is what was actually long regarded as small and low quality in the days of medium-format and large-format film cameras. It got it's name because early DSLRs typically had sensors significantly smaller than the area of film exposed in an equivalent film SLR. Later it become economic to make bigger digital sensors. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Dec 17, 2014 at 11:20
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More simply, what you are missing is that the lens on the iPhone is much MUCH wider than the lens on your DSLR. You have a 35mm lens on the DSLR, but you have a 4mm lens on the iPhone. The iPhone's lens is DRASTICALLY wider than the lens you are using on the DSLR, so comparing it to a 35mm lens isn't really comparing apples to oranges.

Practically, you can't make a useful 4mm full frame lens, but if you were to go to something like a 14mm or 17mm lens, you would see that the DSLR can see far FAR more.

The reason for this is cropping. The lens for both the iPhone and the DSLR both make an image the same size behind the lens for the same actual focal length, however the iPhone has a miniscule sensor that only covers a very, very small portion of the surface area of the DSLR sensor. With the iPhone, you are only looking at a fraction of the image that the DSLR would see on the same lens, so it appears to be a much longer(narrower) lens than it actually is.

Since the iPhone crams more pixels in to a smaller area, it still can take relatively high resolution images from that very small sensor, but this has other impacts on quality such as running in to issues with taking in less light per pixel, diffraction (which decreases sharpness) and having a very wide depth of field (which can be a good thing, but also makes it highly difficult to impossible to get nice background blur.) With its larger sensor, the DSLR can have bigger pixels that can take in more light, have shallower depths of field and has less issue with diffraction due to the larger pixels.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ A fine answer. Just want to point out that when you wrote "having a very wide field of view", it should read "depth of field". \$\endgroup\$
    – Nayuki
    Commented Mar 27, 2016 at 3:27
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Nayuki - thanks, hard to tell what I was originally thinking there. I have a feeling I may have been thinking one thing, changed my mind mid post and forgotten to update. \$\endgroup\$
    – AJ Henderson
    Commented Mar 27, 2016 at 4:34
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I am trying to understand what is the deal with "full-frame" and what difference it makes...

Part of the confusion seems to be that you read the phrase 35mm equivalent and assumed it meant the focal length of the lens. In fact, that phrase simply refers to the 35mm camera format that started with the film cameras upon which DSLRs are based.

The photographic film used in most film SLR cameras is called "35mm film" because it's 35mm wide. The frames recorded on that film are typically 24mm high and 36mm wide, so a "full frame" DSLR has a digital sensor that has those dimensions. Because the 35mm format is ubiquitous, it's common to talk about lenses for other formats in terms of the lenses for 35mm cameras that would give a similar field of view.

So, when you read something like:

The iPhone 6 has a 29mm (35mm equivalent) lens...

just know that it doesn't mean that the iPhone has a 29mm lens that's equivalent to a 35mm lens on your DSLR; instead it means that the iPhone has some lens that gives a field of view similar to a 29mm lens on a 35mm format camera (such as a full frame DSLR).

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What's happening is that the sensor in your phone is (for the sake or argument) 1/10th the width/height of that in a full-frame camera. However, then lens in the phone is 10 times as 'wide' as that of the camera lens. The 2 cancel each other out and give you the same field of view.

So you might have a 50mm lens on the camera and a 5mm lens on the phone. If the 'crop factor' of the phone sensor is 10 compared to the camera, then you get the same FOV. Take the focal length of the phone lens and multiply it by the crop factor you get 5x10 = 50mm 'equivalent' focal length.

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So much misinformation. Where to start? I teach photography at UMD so i hope i can clear this up for you.

Your fullframe camera- thats just sensor size. Full-frame is the old 35mm film size. Its a tad larger than your aps-c sensors. It also means theres no conversion needed to talk about lenses in mm's. If we say 85mm, its 85mm.

Your iPhone camera needs to be converted into 35mm equivalent. Its about 33mm according to the internets.

So, your full-frame 35mm is roughly equivalent to your iphone 33mm. And yet... Youre right- 33 is slightly wider than 35. That's independent of the room or the setting.

The end.

Except i just put my 35mm lens on my Canon 6d and compared the image to my iphone 6s. The iphone was MUCH wider than the 33mm posted all over the internet. It looks more like 25mm to me.

Numbers shmumbers.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Hello @Mikef, welcome to Photo.SE. Thanks for your (short) answer, but I have trouble seeing what more it brings to mattdm's answer. \$\endgroup\$
    – Olivier
    Commented Sep 25, 2015 at 18:49
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Ignore all the math and just consider this: the sensor on your iPhone is about 1/2 the size of your pinky finger's fingernail. The sensor on a "full frame" camera is the size of 35mm film; that's about 25 times the size of the sensor on an iPhone. A larger sensor captures more light, has less noise (aka "grain" from the film days"). In every area of technical measurement a "full frame" sensor is superior to the tiny iPhone sensor.

Your "full frame" photo and your iPhone picture look nice and about the same on a tiny iPhone screen. Now start to enlarge a section - maybe a great and rare shot of grandma at a picnic looking good and you want to crop out all strangers and junk in the rest of the picture. The "full frame" will look great. The iPhone photo will quickly deteriorate in quality - that's just on your iPhone.

Now make one of those standard 8x10 desk or wall photos of grandma. Your "full frame" photo will look great and your iPhone photo will stink: grainy, blurry, degraded colors. Now make an enlargement, say 10x14 or 18x32. Your "full frame" photo will look great and your iPhone photo will look like garbage.

So, if you intend to just look at all your photos on a tiny iPhone screen and you know you will never need to crop any of them, and never need to enlarge them, you probably don't want to bother with a "full frame" camera.

At the end of the day, it all starts with the sensor. As a general rule, the bigger the sensor, the better the image. If you have a large, good sensor, you will have a good, crisp, well color-balanced photo at almost any size including a poster. A tiny sensor (on an iPhone) gives you an image you can do nothing with except look at it on an iPhone without seeing grain, softness of colors, soft edges, blurred features.

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    \$\begingroup\$ While this is mostly true, it doesn't actually answer the question at all. \$\endgroup\$
    – Philip Kendall
    Commented Feb 8, 2018 at 8:43

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