I assume a lot of us here that do architectural work, would be asked to create photomontages as a part of the job. For the photography part I normally use my 350D with a 10-22mm lens. My question is this...how can I make sure the camera focal length in 3D Max is identical to that of the photograph?
That might sound like a silly question, but what is throwing me off is the focal length multiplier of the 350d. It's 1.6x so to find the 35mm equivalent I multiply say 10mm by 1.6 to get 16mm. Is this the correct way of doing it? I've found sometimes that the Max camera doesn't look like it actually matches the image when I multiply by 1.6 and I end up just doing it manually by eye.
Some of our images are created for planning purposes and so we're often required to make sure they are as accurate as possible, so obviously if you're compositing 3D elements on a photograph you'd have to make sure the 3D camera is at the same focal length as the actual camera.
Can anyone offer any advice on this topic?
Thanks!
That might sound like a silly question, but what is throwing me off is the focal length multiplier of the 350d. It's 1.6x so to find the 35mm equivalent I multiply say 10mm by 1.6 to get 16mm. Is this the correct way of doing it? I've found sometimes that the Max camera doesn't look like it actually matches the image when I multiply by 1.6 and I end up just doing it manually by eye.
Some of our images are created for planning purposes and so we're often required to make sure they are as accurate as possible, so obviously if you're compositing 3D elements on a photograph you'd have to make sure the 3D camera is at the same focal length as the actual camera.
Can anyone offer any advice on this topic?
Thanks!
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