Right now I cannot afford the Sony's or I'd probably have pulled the trigger already.
When someone posts images from a P900 or a Sony RX10II,III or any of the superzooms really, it catches my eye and in my mind I would like to look/compare IQ so that if I decide to upgrade from my Fuji I will have some idea of how these cameras perform at the longer focal lengths. But my wife hates when I travel with a ILC so I find I'm always using my Fuji bridge.
I have a Nikon D200 with several legacy and AF-S lenses. That's great and hopefully it will interpret most popular manufacturer's data this way. So it appears that Fuji does report 35mm Equivalent Focal Length.
Turns out I already had the exiftool download on my desktop and I installed it. and plugging in an image URL or by adding an extension to Chrome. You can also use this web page to look at EXIF data in your browser. Thumbnail Image : (Binary data 10211 bytes, use -b option to extract)įocal Length : 126.0 mm (35 mm equivalent: 705.4 mm) Preview Image : (Binary data 22402 bytes, use -b option to extract)Įncoding Process : Baseline DCT, Huffman coding
Interoperability Index : R98 - DCF basic file (sRGB) Image Stabilization : Sensor-shift On (mode 2, shooting only) 0 White Balance Fine Tune : Red +0, Blue +0 Sensitivity Type : Standard Output Sensitivity
Software : Digital Camera FinePix HS25EXR Ver1.04Įxposure Program : Shutter speed priority AE Here's one.ĮXIFTOOL outputs the following: Focal length in red at the bottom.camera has a crop factor of 5.6įWIW - Photoshop & Lightroom do not show the 35 mm equivalent, but Jeffery Friedl's metadata plugin does which use EXIFTOOL to obtain the list of EXIF fileds and values does.įile Modification Date/Time : 2017:07:12 20:50:33-04:00įile Access Date/Time : 2017:07:12 20:53:36-04:00įile Inode Change Date/Time : 2017:07:12 20:50:39-04:00Įxif Byte Order : Little-endian (Intel, II) NOTE: Are you sure you are seeing all the EXIF data? software like EXIFTOOL will get all of it, Lightroom does not show all the exif data without additional plugins. Too many people cannot grasp the crop factor math and results. I would assume that what is in EXIF, if only one notation, is the focal length used on the lens - not the crop factor focal length, it would be far too confusing if it were the other way around. ( show quote)Īs some of the responses show, SOME cameras do list both the lens focal length used AND the focal length multiplied by the crop factor - but possibly not all. Is that ALWAYS the physical focal length or do some cameras/software convert to FF/35MM focal length in the EXIF data? And is there a definitive way to know which it represents? Thanks.I appreciate all of the info but I'm still confuse. So when I download a photo from this site sometimes I only see one focal length. For me to get the FF 35mm equivalent I need to multiply that value by my crop factor. My Fuji only lists one focal length in EXIF data and it is the actual physical focal length of the lens. I appreciate all of the info but I'm still confused so I'll try to be more specific.