FOCAL LENGTH

What is Focal Length? 

Ultra Wide Angle Lens [10mm to 24mm]

The photo was taken with an ultra-wide-angle lens.

Wide Angle Lens [24mm to 35mm]

This photo was taken with a wide-angle lens.

Standard Lens [35mm to 70mm]

The photo was taken with a standard lens.

Telephoto Lens [70mm to 300mm]

Man using a telephoto lens

Super Telephoto Lens [300mm and beyond]

The photo was taken with a super telephoto lens.

Focal Length and Camera Shake

Pros and Cons of Variable Focal Lengths 

A variable focal length lens

Zoom lenses can also be much larger and heavier to accommodate the zooming mechanism. 

Pros and Cons of Fixed Focal Lengths 

The photo was taken with a fixed focal length lens

Fixed focal lengths, also called prime lenses, do not zoom. The focal length they are set to cannot change. Newer photographs find the idea of a lens that cannot zoom odd and impractical, but prime lenses are prevalent in the industry for a reason! 

Fixed lenses’ benefits are their sharpness, quality, and wide apertures. Because prime lenses do not zoom, their barrels aren’t over-encumbered with zooming mechanisms. The lens is perfectly built for its exact focal length. As such, these lenses tend to be exponentially sharper than lenses that zoom! This also allows the lens engineers to focus on other key features (such as aperture) rather than ensuring the zooming barrel works well. 

Fixed lenses have much wider apertures than zoom lenses. As mentioned in the Aperture Explained article, wide apertures lend a hand in photographing in very low light and producing beautiful shallow depths of field. Generally speaking, variable focal lengths can only hold an aperture at a width of 2.8 at its widest, while fixed focal lengths can go down as low as f/0.95! 

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