Jump to content

Makro:Depth of Field calculations?


colwyn_griffith

Recommended Posts

Well I just want to know what kind of Depth of Field I can get with a 4x5/5x7 makro 120mm lens; either Rodenstock or Schneider. Is there a sytem of calculation I can do to figure this out? If there isn`t, could you tell me what type of lens to use for a close up covering the aproximate dimensions 15 to 60cm wide by 30 to 70cm deep? This 3 dimentional space also has a height that ranges from 5 to 35cm. If at all possible I would like to keep most of these dimentions in focus. Is there some lens or leses that can pull it off? Cheers.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are a number of on-line calculators, and formula are in a

static page somewhere in photo.net. Any decent photo book will also

have this information. See also some other posts over the last few

days.

 

<p>

 

I'm not sure that I correctly understand your question. Say, your

subject is 20x25cm. 4x5 film is about 10x12.5cm, so your

magnigication is m=0.5. Conventional formulae for Depth of Field for

a 120mm lens at f/45, CofC 0.1mm, give about 12.5cm (focus is from

30.8 to 43.3cm), and you seem to want 30cm. You get almost this much

at f/90, if you can stop down that far.

 

<p>

 

For macro work, for a given magnification, changing the focal length

has very little effect on the DofF. There are some very specialist

techniques that might be usable, essentially by lighting a 'thin

plane' of the subject, at the focused distance, and moving the

subject down during a long exposure.

 

<p>

 

Before you ask, 35mm format would give you even less DofF.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My apologies for the statement about 35mm, it isn't correct, because

we have small magnifications here. For 35mm format, magnification is

m=0.144. For f=55mm, c=0.03, at f/45 (if you can get there), DoF =

20.5cm (which still isn't enough).

 

<p>

 

If anyone cares, and my apologies for going off topic, the 'cut-over'

point where, for the same subject size and same aperture number, the

DoF is equal in 35mm and 5x4 formats is about m=0.25 (35mm) and

m=0.75 (5x4). The subject size is about 96mm by 144mm. For greater

magnifications, 5x4 wins. For lesser magnifications, 35mm wins. This

makes the usual assumptions inherent in the conventional DoF formulae.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...