Hi! Let me explain. 60mm x 1.6 (crop factor) = 96mm (full frame equivalent) . If you were to mount a EF 100mm macro lens on a Full Frame camera (Canon 5D Mark III, for example) and, next to it, you had a crop sensor camera (let's say Canon 80D), with our Canon EF-S 60mm macro lens attached - both of them would show, roughly, the same image, the same field of view. If we looked through the viewfinder, there would be 100mm on Full Frame, 96mm on crop. So it doesn't matter if its "EF-S" on the lens, the 60mm macro is a tele prime that gives you roughly 100mm. These terms confused me too, a couple of years ago, until I put a FF and a crop sensor camera next to each other. Hope my explanation made sense!
Hi! I don't think so. This lens is too zoomed in. I never did dental photography, but If you do a Google search, you'll find out. For example, even on TH-cam, if you search "Dental Photography Equipment" , you will find a dedicated video with all the needed info.
The minimum focusing distance will still be at 20cm away from the camera's sensor (that's from where it is being calculated, sensor->subject). The 1:1 ratio just eliminates the space from the left and right side to give the square shaped image and this doesn't affect the minimum focusing distance.
Hi! Christopher Frost, I admit, is a man that I admire. In my lens reviews, I put my own personal approach by bringing structure in the video. I believe that the information here presented is better digested and remembered by the viewer by showing chapters ( 1 to 15 ). This was my idea and I think that it helps. There are 30 hours of work per video. Without having a passion for lenses this wouldn't be possible. I am glad that you like it! The reviews will get better and better in the future.
Hi! Unfortunately not. I'm pretty sure that it won't even fit/screw on the 6D's mount - It has the "EF-S" letters in the full name, so it was made for crop sensor dslrs. Only Canon lenses with "EF" in the name will work on Full Frame cameras, like the Canon 6D Mark II.
Unfortunately, it does not work on full-frame cameras, it has "EF-S" in the full name - this means that it only works on crop sensor cameras. If it had "EF" , it could have worked on a full frame camera with the help of an adapter.
work yes,but you need a adaptor ..but the image quality is very bad. if you in exemple have a camera with a 30mgp sensor , in a lens apc turns in to 10 .
EF-S lenses DO work on a FF mirrorless with the Canon EF to RF adapter. My Canon R6Mii crops the picture down to 3744 x 2496 pixels or 9.3MP as opposed to the full (6000x4000) 24MP. If anyone says no, they don't know or don't own a modern mirrorless camera.
@@apertureatlasthank you for this. I’ve been lucky enough to get a copy (which I’m hoping to use with my Fuji crop sensors) but also a film canon camera with another lens. I know the efs won’t work with the film camera but would the 28-105 ef work on a crop sensor with an adapter? I’m not that familiar with swapping lenses around!!
Really enjoyed this video, good work
Thank you very much! Glad to hear this!
Nice video!
Do we need to consider crop factor x1.6 since it is 'ef-s'? Or i understood wrongly.
Hi! Let me explain. 60mm x 1.6 (crop factor) = 96mm (full frame equivalent) . If you were to mount a EF 100mm macro lens on a Full Frame camera (Canon 5D Mark III, for example) and, next to it, you had a crop sensor camera (let's say Canon 80D), with our Canon EF-S 60mm macro lens attached - both of them would show, roughly, the same image, the same field of view. If we looked through the viewfinder, there would be 100mm on Full Frame, 96mm on crop. So it doesn't matter if its "EF-S" on the lens, the 60mm macro is a tele prime that gives you roughly 100mm. These terms confused me too, a couple of years ago, until I put a FF and a crop sensor camera next to each other. Hope my explanation made sense!
Ef-s does not fit on ff so that explenition is unnedded.
It is a crop sensor lens so 60 mm is 60mm and not 96mm on ff as it csnt be used on ff.
Hello!
Is the camera and macro lens in this video suitable for dental photography?
Hi! I don't think so. This lens is too zoomed in. I never did dental photography, but If you do a Google search, you'll find out. For example, even on TH-cam, if you search "Dental Photography Equipment" , you will find a dedicated video with all the needed info.
By having that lens with a cropped sensor camera, when taking a 1:1 image is it still 20 cm away? or does this change?
The minimum focusing distance will still be at 20cm away from the camera's sensor (that's from where it is being calculated, sensor->subject). The 1:1 ratio just eliminates the space from the left and right side to give the square shaped image and this doesn't affect the minimum focusing distance.
Do I need an adaptor when using this lens with a Canon M50 Mark II?
Yes, you need the EF to EOS M adapter, otherwise the lens won't even fit - different systems/different mounts.
@@apertureatlas wonderful, I appreciate your timely response! Thank you. 👍
I see some Christopher Frost inspiration, nice video! Just be sure to make it your own :)
Hi! Christopher Frost, I admit, is a man that I admire. In my lens reviews, I put my own personal approach by bringing structure in the video. I believe that the information here presented is better digested and remembered by the viewer by showing chapters ( 1 to 15 ). This was my idea and I think that it helps. There are 30 hours of work per video. Without having a passion for lenses this wouldn't be possible. I am glad that you like it! The reviews will get better and better in the future.
@@apertureatlas Keep doing what you love! I look forward to the next videos :)
@@MaartenVanhoutteghem Thank you very much for the encouragement! It really matters a lot, especially now, at the beginning!
Chrisopher Frost is THE Standard for lens reviews. Glad to see other reviews with their own personal touch.
Is this lens compatible for canon 6 d mark 2?
Hi! Unfortunately not. I'm pretty sure that it won't even fit/screw on the 6D's mount - It has the "EF-S" letters in the full name, so it was made for crop sensor dslrs. Only Canon lenses with "EF" in the name will work on Full Frame cameras, like the Canon 6D Mark II.
Does it work on full-frame mirrorless cameras?
Unfortunately, it does not work on full-frame cameras, it has "EF-S" in the full name - this means that it only works on crop sensor cameras. If it had "EF" , it could have worked on a full frame camera with the help of an adapter.
work yes,but you need a adaptor ..but the image quality is very bad. if you in exemple have a camera with a 30mgp sensor , in a lens apc turns in to 10 .
Nope!
EF-S lenses DO work on a FF mirrorless with the Canon EF to RF adapter. My Canon R6Mii crops the picture down to 3744 x 2496 pixels or 9.3MP as opposed to the full (6000x4000) 24MP. If anyone says no, they don't know or don't own a modern mirrorless camera.
@@apertureatlasthank you for this. I’ve been lucky enough to get a copy (which I’m hoping to use with my Fuji crop sensors) but also a film canon camera with another lens. I know the efs won’t work with the film camera but would the 28-105 ef work on a crop sensor with an adapter? I’m not that familiar with swapping lenses around!!