True, but from what I gather from the way the 300D works, the "focal
length multiplier" (1.6 for the 300D, 2 for the E-1) is not actually a
multiplier. Instead, it just cuts down the FoV for that lens in order to
gain a similar FoV that the equivalent focal length would produce. The
DoF remains at the original focal length however. What I'm asking is how
does, say a 50mm lens on the E-1 (100mm equivalent) compare to a similar
100mm and a 50mm on your favourite OM at the same aperture?
Daniel
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jeff Keller
Sent: Thursday, 13 November 2003 1:31 AM
To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [OM] E-1 bokeh?
An image at greater magnification from the same lens would generally be
considered to have a smaller DOF. The blur gets magnified also. With
smaller
FOV the final image would be viewed at the same distance.
-jeff
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