Any EF lens is specifically designed for full frame sensors, however, if you are using a full frame lens (50mm 1.8/1.4/1.2 etc, essentially anything that's not an EF-S), this does not mean you cannot use it on a crop sensor (APS-C, such as the Rebel series, T1i, T2i, etc...). It does, however, mean you have a 1.6x crop factor to be aware of, and in this case, 50mm = 80mm (on a crop sensor.
I have the same combination.My advice too you, use a B&W 58mm UV orr Skylight filter on it.,and the pictures will twice as sharp.buy the way ate f 5.6 both lenses wil be sharper than a L series lens.Remember, these are primes.
@RawrRawrRob It will be a 50mm but will appear as an 80mm in comparison. This is because a "crop" sensor produces a "cropped" image. This basically means that the image produced on a cropped senor would be the same image produced by a full frame sensor at 80mm. Does this make sense?
@RawrRawrRob Oh and the best 50mm lens in my opinion and test images, is the Sigma Normal 50mm f/1.4 EX DG HSM. Check out reviews here on YouTube. The Bokeh is even superior than Canon's own EF 50mm f/1.2L USM which is 3 times the price. Check out the comparison by DigitalRevTV and others here on YouTube, the images speak for themselves. It should be noted that the DigitalRevTV host admits that this lens even outperforms the Nikon 50mm 1.2 and he's a self admitted Nikon fanboy.
@Coccc22 nope. a crop camera, like yours, just means the image that is taken is "cropped" due to its smaller sensor. this just means that its "zoomed in" by a factor of 1.6. so if you shoot with a 50mm, its like shooting with an 80mm lens. your camera is very good. Thanks for watching!
@HoeBlogggs thats why i put quotation marks. it gives the same effect as if it was zoomed in. the only difference is tha you actually lose pixels when you actually zoom in.
@dipmvideos Well, a croped camera sensor does take worse pictures then a full frame camera. The larger the sensor the better the overall quality of photographs.
@Coccc22 The size of the sensor is 1.6 times smaller than full format. Full format is called full format because it is equal to that of a frame of 35mm film. 35 mm film was the most common form of film prior to digital. Search ken rockwell crop format and it will provide you with a visual representation of various crop factors.
found out theres also a 50 f1.0 6000 dollars, 1987 i think
Mzahaka1313 2 weeks ago
Any EF lens is specifically designed for full frame sensors, however, if you are using a full frame lens (50mm 1.8/1.4/1.2 etc, essentially anything that's not an EF-S), this does not mean you cannot use it on a crop sensor (APS-C, such as the Rebel series, T1i, T2i, etc...). It does, however, mean you have a 1.6x crop factor to be aware of, and in this case, 50mm = 80mm (on a crop sensor.
bolson2011 3 weeks ago
hello! nice vid.. i wanna ask if my 600d matches with the 50mm 1.8? thanks...
KMDZ92 1 month ago
@KMDZ92 sure, it matches. it's the must-have
nonesecure 1 month ago
I have the 1.4 and its awesome, buy it!!
Dannysubliminal 1 month ago
I have the same combination.My advice too you, use a B&W 58mm UV orr Skylight filter on it.,and the pictures will twice as sharp.buy the way ate f 5.6 both lenses wil be sharper than a L series lens.Remember, these are primes.
helthuismartin 4 months ago
Comment removed
bijayranjana 5 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
filipino ka ba? haha
kulotskee 5 months ago
filipino ka ba? haha
kulotskee 5 months ago
So since I have a T1i, and cause its a "cropped sensor", when I put on a 50mm, it'll actaully be 80mm?
RawrRawrRob 6 months ago
@RawrRawrRob yup, you'd have that field of view of around 8mm.
dipmvideos 6 months ago
@RawrRawrRob It will be a 50mm but will appear as an 80mm in comparison. This is because a "crop" sensor produces a "cropped" image. This basically means that the image produced on a cropped senor would be the same image produced by a full frame sensor at 80mm. Does this make sense?
floex831 3 months ago
@RawrRawrRob Oh and the best 50mm lens in my opinion and test images, is the Sigma Normal 50mm f/1.4 EX DG HSM. Check out reviews here on YouTube. The Bokeh is even superior than Canon's own EF 50mm f/1.2L USM which is 3 times the price. Check out the comparison by DigitalRevTV and others here on YouTube, the images speak for themselves. It should be noted that the DigitalRevTV host admits that this lens even outperforms the Nikon 50mm 1.2 and he's a self admitted Nikon fanboy.
floex831 3 months ago
why invest in a 5d mark ii with no 50mm L?
mrmeadowsiscool 7 months ago
@ivanaker1982 That is not true. When you put FF lens on APS-C camera, you use center of the optics, which is better than corners.
player1CR 7 months ago
thanks for posting this vid. im currently using a canon 50mm f 1.8 for my 60d... maybe im gonna buy the f 1.4 someday..
TheLove4photos 8 months ago
@TheLove4photos yup, definitely!
dipmvideos 8 months ago
just a question dude, do you think the canon 50mm f 1.8 is a good lens? im just a hobbyist and i own a canon 60d.
TheLove4photos 8 months ago
@ef7771 thanks!
dipmvideos 9 months ago
what does a crop camera mean? i have a t2i. does that mean my camera takes worse pictures?
Coccc22 1 year ago
@Coccc22 nope. a crop camera, like yours, just means the image that is taken is "cropped" due to its smaller sensor. this just means that its "zoomed in" by a factor of 1.6. so if you shoot with a 50mm, its like shooting with an 80mm lens. your camera is very good. Thanks for watching!
dipmvideos 1 year ago
@dipmvideos Zoomed in. No. Its a crop of the image taken from the middle. It doesnt change focal length or compression of the background etc.
HoeBlogggs 1 year ago
@HoeBlogggs thats why i put quotation marks. it gives the same effect as if it was zoomed in. the only difference is tha you actually lose pixels when you actually zoom in.
dipmvideos 1 year ago
@dipmvideos Well, a croped camera sensor does take worse pictures then a full frame camera. The larger the sensor the better the overall quality of photographs.
ivanaker1982 9 months ago
@Coccc22 The size of the sensor is 1.6 times smaller than full format. Full format is called full format because it is equal to that of a frame of 35mm film. 35 mm film was the most common form of film prior to digital. Search ken rockwell crop format and it will provide you with a visual representation of various crop factors.
DCassidy42 10 months ago