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Pages in category "Full-frame mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras" The following 37 pages are in this category, out of 37 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
For example, a 24 mm lens on a camera with a crop factor of 1.5 has a 62° diagonal angle of view, the same as that of a 36 mm lens on a 35 mm film camera. On a full-frame digital camera, the 24 mm lens has the same 84° angle of view as it would on a 35 mm film camera.
Pages in category "Full-frame DSLR cameras" The following 39 pages are in this category, out of 39 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The first digital rangefinder camera commercially marketed was the Epson R-D1 (released in 2004), followed by the Leica M8 in 2006. [16] They were some of the first digital lens-interchangeable cameras without a reflex mirror, but they are not considered mirrorless cameras because they did not use an electronic viewfinder for live preview, but, rather, an optical viewfinder. [16]
Sony Alpha 1, a full-frame mirrorless digital camera. The first full-frame digital SLR cameras were developed in Japan from around 2000 to 2002: the MZ-D by Pentax, [40] the N Digital by Contax's Japanese R6D team, [41] and the EOS-1Ds by Canon. [42] Gradually in the 2000s, the full-frame DSLR became the dominant camera type for professional ...
Pixels are square and is often equal to 1, for example, a 1,000 by 1,000-pixel sensor would have 1,000,000 pixels, or 1 megapixel. On full-frame sensors (i.e., 24 mm 36 mm), some cameras propose images with 20–25 million pixels that were captured by 7.5–m photosites, or a surface that is 50 times larger.
In cinematography, full frame refers to an image area (today most commonly on a digital sensor) that is the same size as that used by a 35mm still camera. [1] Still cameras run the film horizontally behind the lens, whereas standard 35mm motion-picture cameras run the film vertically. Thus a 35mm still camera's image is significantly larger ...
A high-speed video camera which records to electronic memory, A high-speed framing camera which records images on multiple image planes or multiple locations on the same image plane [3] (generally film or a network of CCD cameras), A high-speed streak camera which records a series of line-sized images to film or electronic memory.