You didn't say what make camera you are asking about. "IS" is used by some manufacturers (Canon, for example) to indicate a lens with built-in image stabilization, which lets you shoot handheld for longer exposures in moderate to low light.
2.4 mm All kidding aside: the 3.5mm lens has a wider angle than the 6mm one. This means that in a picture, you will see a larger area with the 3.5mm lens, but with the 6mm lens you'd see more (sharper) detail.
These are abbreviations for units of metric measurement; 'm' stands for 'metres', and 'mm' stands for 'millimetres'.
Yes! Manual focussing is easy and that is a great lens.
You need to buy an adaptor. Make sure you specify exactly the type of lens and exactly the camera you want to attach it to. Don't forget that there will be a large increase in magnification, i.e. your 35mm lens will give more telephoto effect on a 16mm camera. It is unlikely that the automatic functions (aperture, focus) of the lens will be carried into the 16mm camera.
The shortest zoom that would be really useful for wildlife photography is a 300 mm, but a good lens to start off with is a 75 to 300 mm zoom, or a 100 to 300 mm zoom. Probably, the best lens to go with would be a 400 mm f5.6 lens for wildlife photography, because more than likely, a 300 will be too short. You should also buy a good, sturdy tripod. Make sure it's not too heavy for you to carry around.
The "mm" on a lens stands for millimeters, which refers to the focal length of the lens. A higher mm number indicates a longer focal length, resulting in a narrower field of view and magnified image. This affects photography by determining how much of the scene can be captured in the frame and the level of magnification of the subject.
185.5cm
The "mm" in a camera lens refers to the focal length of the lens, which determines the angle of view and magnification of the image.
2.4 mm All kidding aside: the 3.5mm lens has a wider angle than the 6mm one. This means that in a picture, you will see a larger area with the 3.5mm lens, but with the 6mm lens you'd see more (sharper) detail.
In standard film camera reference which is commonly used, a 50 mm lens equals a neutral value, or 1x magnification, so a 12x lens would be 600 mm.
It depends on the actual focal length. For a 35 mm format lens, 200 mm is about 4x magnification, to get 20x you'd need a 1000 mm lens. For smaller formats, such as 8 mm or a camcorder, find the focal length for normal view, then multiply by 20.
MM stands for millimeter in unit of length and distance and conversion .it stands for millimeters.
"mm" on a camera lens refers to the focal length of the lens, measured in millimeters. It indicates how much the lens can zoom in or out, with larger numbers representing a longer zoom or telephoto lens, and smaller numbers indicating a wider angle or wide-angle lens.
mm stands for millimeters
No, mm stands for millimeters.
MM stands for Music Monday.
In Accounting, 'M' stands for 'thousand', and 'MM' stands for 'million' (thousand thousand).