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enseth
17-05-2015, 9:58am
I shoot with a A99 Sony full frame camera and have a couple of wide angle lenses. One Sony 16-35mm (full frame), which I use 70% -80% of the time and a Sigma 10-20mm APS-C lens which I rarely use. Although the camera has an Auto change setting when switching from a full frame lens to an APS-C lens it doesn't work with Sigma lenses. You need to manually it set to "ON". Last night I was trying some star shots using wide angle lenses. Just for the hell of it I thought I'd give the Sigma a run. I went to change the APS-C setting to "ON" and it was already set on it. Apparently I hadn't changed it back to "Auto" last time I used the lens, which was months ago. The upshot of this is that for months I have been shooting cropped images with my Sony lens with out realizing it, which is not great, especially when you do a bit of real estate photography on the side. Ah well, hopefully lesson learned. Sorry if I have bored you with this post but I thought I'd share anyway.

ameerat42
17-05-2015, 10:34am
:oh, t:o:o bad!:nod:

arthurking83
17-05-2015, 11:20am
LOL!

I was shooting with the Sigma 10-20 in 135 format, for about a year, while I contemplated which UWA lens to get for the D800E.
99.9% of the images I shot were in full frame mode tho, I think once or twice I set the frame capture to APS-C(24x16).

If you are still gong to stick with this lens for a little while longer, I reckon it's best just to leave it in full frame mode and not have the camera crop it for 'ya.
Reason is, that even tho there is a bit of mechanical vignetting (as you'd expect), you can still crop the frame larger than the std APS-C sized crop gives you(ie. you can capture more than it natively allows)

The major advantage in this is if you try a 1:1 crop ratio from a full frame capture. Crop to within the darkened corner limits at 1:1 and your resulting frame is much larger than you would get with the camera set to APS-C crop.


ps. if you're thinking of a replacement lens for this 10-20 at some point in the future, I can highly recommend the Sigma 12-24. Overall sharpness is good. the only issue with it is the difficulty in using filters on it.
At about $800 it's reasonably priced too.

n00g33
09-06-2015, 11:23pm
Haha surely you would have noticed after reviewing your photos? Maybe not with stars but definitely with real estate photography? The first time I did it I immediately noticed.

Don't worry. Better make the mistake now and not later. Now I've learnt to triple check everything and also during shooting sessions so I don't come home with crud.