It's a great read and should help those stuck in the full-frame vs. APS-C debate get back down to earth. And here's something else to take away: in the end, you'll have to make a decision whether
Full-frame and APS-C, 72mm filters, 33.3 oz./944g with collar, 29.5 oz./838g without collar, 4'/1.2m close focus. Nikon vs Canon vs Sony Full Frame Mirrorless
Most of their consumer-level cameras have 1.6x crop sensors. It’s also called the Canon APS-C. 1.5x Crop Factor: Every camera brand, except Canon, manufactures its APS-C cameras with a 1.5x crop factor. It’s the standard and most widespread crop sensor.
For example, 50mm, 35mm, and 25mm lenses are normal lenses on full-frame-, APS-C-, and Micro Four Thirds-format cameras respectively. As a result, full-frame lenses of equivalent coverage provide a shallower depth-of-field at any given aperture, so long as the images being compared have the same field of view (framing). This shallower depth of
If you compare an APS-C size sensor to a full-frame sensor with approximately the same total pixel count — like the 24 million pixel APS-C sensor on a Canon EOS Rebel model vs. the 26.2 million pixels on the full-frame EOS RP camera — the larger sensor will have physically larger pixels.

This is an image created by using the APS-C "only" Tamron SP 17-50mm f/2.8 Di II set at 17mm when mounted on a full frame Canon 5D mark II. The white rectangle is the part of the image that would have been captured by an APS-C camera. The APS-C sized area enlarged by (roughly) the same magnification:

B0WSJ.
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  • full frame vs aps c canon