• brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    This is indeed perspective distortion from wide angle lenses (like your selfie cam):

    Focal length comparison

    The influencer-type “holding up a phone in the mirror” shot is actually technically sound, because it uses the phone’s longer-focal-length camera.

    And typically this is the camera with the biggest sensor.


    (I realize this is just a meme, but I can’t help spreading photography bits like I’m crazy).

    • BorgDrone@feddit.nl
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      12 hours ago

      Pet peeve: This is a common misunderstanding. Focal length doesn’t cause the distortion. The distortion is caused by the distance between the camera and the subject. Think of longer focal length as an optical crop. A longer focal length allows you to be farther away from the subject while still filling the frame. If you took a photo from the same distance with a wider lens and simply cropped it afterwards to have the same composition there would be no difference in distortion.

      • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        In practice, people use the term “focal length” as field of view/zoom for the final image, especially when we start talking smartphones and full-frame “equivalent” focal lengths.

        I don’t disagree, the article I got this image from explains exactly what you did, but… I think the semantic ambiguity is acceptable, in this case. The actual angular field of view in a shot isn’t advertised in specifications. Neither is the sensor crop factor in post processing. It’s all kind of impractical to calculate, so using FF equivalent focal length as a “zoominess” standard people can understand makes sense.