How Lens Compression and Perspective Distortion Work

We've talked about this before on Fstoppers, but there still seems to be some debate about lens compression. Let's dive a little deeper into perspective distortion.

We all know that if you shoot a portrait of someone's face up close with a wide angle lens, their face will be distorted and the background will appear extremely far behind them. This is called "extension distortion." If you back up and take a picture of the same person with a telephoto lens, the subject and background will become more "compressed" meaning that the foreground and background will appear closer together. This is called "compression distortion."

These noticeable differences lead most photographers to believe that wide angle lenses are distorting a scene while telephoto lenses are compressing a scene, but they are overlooking what is actually happening: the camera is moving. In reality, the distance from the camera to the subject is what is creating these distortions. 

Two years ago, I wrote an article titled "Lens Compression Doesn't Exist," and in that article, I created an animated gif to prove that a wide angle lens cropped in and a telephoto lens will create the same amount of foreground and background "compression" if the camera remains in the same place. 

I reproduced this example in the video above when I took a picture of David with both a wide and telephoto lens. 

Why is this happening? 

The fundamental principle boils down to this: to double or halve the size of an object in your frame, you will have to double or halve the distance of the camera to that object, but not everything in the frame is the same distance away from the camera. Your subject might be close while the background is farther away.

Let's use my animation of Patrick in front of the gazebo as an example. Let's say that my first shot of Patrick with a 15mm lens was taken 1 ft from the front of his face and the gazebo was 50 ft away from the camera behind him. If I move back one foot so that I'm two feet away from Patrick, his head will now be half the size in the frame while the gazebo will only be 1/51st smaller — less than 2 percent. As I move back, Patrick is becoming much smaller in the frame at a faster rate than the gazebo behind him simply because he is closer to the camera. When I finally back up 50 feet away from Patrick, I will now be 100 feet away from the gazebo. The gazebo will be half of its original size in the frame (50/100) while Patrick will be 1/50th of his original size in the frame. 

It appears in the animation of Patrick that he is remaining the same size while the background is growing, but in reality, Patrick is getting smaller and I am zooming or cropping in to make him appear to be the same size, and when I do, it's cropping out more and more of the gazebo. 

If the background object were even farther away, we could exaggerate this even more. Take the sun as an example. The sun is 93 million miles away, and if we wanted to make the sun appear half its size, we would need to back up an additional 93 million miles. This means that the sun essentially appears to be the same size no matter where we are on the Earth. For David's "Atlas And The Sun" photo, he placed a subject in front of the sun and started backing up. As he backed up, his subject got smaller and smaller, while the sun stayed for all intents and purposes the exact same size. He then zoomed into his subject and the sun and was able to create a shot where the sun was the same size as his subject. 

To take this one step further, I wanted to try to do the opposite experiment as well and get a wide-angle-looking shot by stitching together a bunch of 70mm images. To do this, I sat close to an old bike and shot it with a 15mm lens. As expected the bike looked incredibly warped. The back tire that was closest to the camera looked huge and oval shaped, while the front of the back tire, which was farther away from the camera, looked much smaller. Without moving the camera, I swapped lenses and started creating a multi-row panorama at 70mm. I had a feeling that because I was so close and I was doing this without a gimbal, Photoshop wouldn't be able to create a perfect stitch, but it ended up working well enough. 

As you can see, we got two images with almost identical perspective distortion taken with a 15mm lens and a 70mm lens. 

Two years ago, we found that more than 50 percent of photographers didn't understand this, and that's probably because we don't talk about the technical side of things enough. Will this information change the way you shoot? Probably not. Obviously, we still need a range of different lenses to capture a scene without having to crop in or make multi-row panoramas. But hey, it's good to be educated, right?

If you're passionate about taking your photography to the next level but aren't sure where to dive in, check out the Well-Rounded Photographer tutorial where you can learn eight different genres of photography in one place. If you purchase it now, or any of our other tutorials, you can save a 15% by using "ARTICLE" at checkout. 

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Lee Morris is a professional photographer based in Charleston SC, and is the co-owner of Fstoppers.com

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38 Comments

This is so ridiculous. Everybody knows this information. What are you saying? You don’t need zoom lenses when you can just shoot everything with a wide angle lens!

OMG! You really cannot follow a conversation.

No, that is not what he is saying.

He's joking :)

BTW I actually didn’t know this. Thanks for the clear breakdown! Stick figures were really helpful too.

Did you watch the video?

Everyone who watched the video knows the answer! 😉

It’s important to know this correctly. If you shoot interiors or landscapes or most things with multiple subjects then you’ll have a better understanding on how to compose. You’ll know if you put something close to your lens it’s going to have less compression than something further away.

The normal incorrect method of teaching only works if you shoot portraits but even then it’s incorrect.

Lee, you are absolutely right. Problem is, I find, that no matter how many times that one tries to explain that perspective is only a matter of one's position in space relative to the subject (and other objects), there are those who will insist that “compression distortion,” or what you called, “extension distortion,” (both of which I call “perspective distortion”), is entirely due to the lens.

…And no matter how many examples of telephoto lenses one can show which exhibits either barrel or pincushion distortion, and how many examples of wide-angle lenses which also show barrel or pincushion distortion, there are some people who will insist that barrelling only occurs on this type of lenses, while pin-cushioning only occurs on that type of lens.

But I thank you for giving your best effort, twice, in this important notion.

I'm pretty surprised so many people don't know that. It's pretty obvious if you're at least a little observant, which hopefully photographers should be. Nice demonstration of the topic. I did something similar with a squat rack at the gym, the other day. Placed myself and framed the shot in my head like I was shooting a wide angle lens, then used a 135mm lens to make a panorama. Similarly, I've walked around with a wide angle lens and an A7RII, saw a shot I would have wanted to take with a telephoto, placed myself to get the perspective right then cropped the shot in post. When it's about lenses, we need to think about field on view. The field of view gives us an idea of what will be projected onto the sensor through the lens.

Great explanation.

All true, but a 15mm lens can focus on a subject a foot away and an 800mm lens can’t.
Big nose and small ears distortion (aka wide angle distortion) can’t be achieved with all focal lengths, so there still is a relation with the lens used.

an 800mm with macro tubes can indeed focus on a subject a foot away, and a panorama with a zoom lens can easily create wide angle distortion. It is all about distance from the subject, not focal length.

How exactly do you focus an 800mm lens that’s 450mm long without extension tubes on a face a foot (305mm) away from the sensor?
Like I said, it can’t be achieved with all focal lengths

you're talking specifics, not optical physics.

Let’s take the thin lens formula:
1/f = 1/u+1/v
f = focal length
u = distance from the object to the lens
v = distance from the lens to the sensor
For an 800mm lens you get: 1/800 = 1/u+1/v
That means u+v can’t be less than 4f
u+v = 4*800 = 3200mm which is the minimum subject distance from the sensor.

You can also reverse this to calculate the max focal length that is able to focus on a subject 1 foot away from the sensor. Such a lens can’t have a longer focal length than 305/4 = 76mm.

that formula is purely for one lens element, not a stack of them, like is in virtually every single commercially available lens. The canon 100mm 2.8L macro lens's MFD is one foot away without macro tubes. I've personally used macro tubes on a 70-200 to focus inches past the front element.

In your previous reply you wrote “you're talking specifics, not optical physics”
I gave you the formula that does apply. I know it’s a formula for lenses of negligible thickness and we use lens systems with many elements for photography. Different lenses have different elements in shape, size and numbers, so you have to talk specifics if you want exact optical calculations for any “commercial lens”. But it really doesn’t matter, the minimum subject distance from sensor will always be at least 4 times the (real) focal length.

The Canon 100mm 2.8L macro is a good example. It’s impossible to focus a 100mm lens at 300mm. What happens is that at 1:1 it’s only about a 68mm lens, that what’s known as focus breathing.
Canon states in their instruction manual that with a Canon 25mm Extension Tube II the magnification at the near end will be 1.37. If it was 100mm that would be 1.25. It can only be 1.37 if the focal length is about 68mm.
See page 14 on the manual.
http://gdlp01.c-wss.com/gds/2/0300003522/02/ef100f28l-macroisusm-im2-eng...

A 70-200 lens at 70mm with extension tubes can focus a foot away, at 200mm it simply can’t.
I just put 68mm of tubes on my own 70-200, add to that the flange distance of EF-mount (44mm) and the length of the lens itself and the front element is already a foot away from the sensor. With that setup the closest I can focus is about 450mm in front of the lens, so about 2.5 feet from the sensor.

fair enough. well reasoned.

I wondered what the closest focus distance would be on an 800mm lens with extension tubes.
Cambridge in color has an extension tube calculator
https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/macro-extension-tubes-closeu...

An 800mm lens has a magnification of about 0.14. The closest focusing distance I can get is more than 10 feet (3200mm) and you need 685mm of extension tubes to get there…
I’m not arguing subject distance as the cause of extension distortion is wrong, only that you can’t focus close enough to get the effect with long lenses.

on that lens, sure.

While all of this is true, I think Lee is just trolling the Angry Photographer (#kidding). In all seriousness, it's really just another expression of his secret love for the Atlas and the Sun photo.

I saw that video a while back. I guess it's easy to be angry when you are wrong 🤷🏻‍♂️

Lee,
Thank you for this informative tutorial. I found it very beneficial. Too often, I see tutorials/ articles here and elsewhere that seem more like ads for products and services. This was both educational and refreshing.

A different kind of article a few months ago was popping up on multiple news sites and addressed this topic for the vain amongst us: people are getting plastic surgery (most notably; nose jobs) because of how they look in their selfies.

This is great. Thank you! Makes me want buy you a pair of close-toed shoes to show my gratitude. :)

I like this video. Good one.

A corollary of this is that the perspective in a photo is not about the sensor size!
It doesn't matter if you have a phone camera with a tiny sensor or a medium format sensor camera, if they're the same distance you get the same photo (with suitable cropping).

The explanation of the visual phenomena is awesome. As to the title on youtube "Lens Compression Doesn't Exist" - there is a saying to describe this pure clickbait title "six of one, half dozen of another." If you want to challenge accepted language because it's not precise enough, that's cool. We'll see if it catches on, or if more likely, after watching your video, a few pretentious dudes just start snootily correcting people for using a perfectly valid term. Simply put, without the lens, there is no way to even observe the phenomena this video so precisely explains. So tying the descriptive word "compression" to the object that allows for the very existence of the visual phenomena - the lens - seems not only acceptable, but more obviously descriptive than the more generic sounding (even if more precise), and less descriptive "perspective compression." Besides, who needs all those extra syllables man? Just my own pretentious $.02. =) EDIT: All that said, I love you guys, and actually think this is one of the least photo pretentious sites in general.

It's all well and good if you know the distinction, but the problem is that a good number of people don't... which leads to misinformation about how things actually work. The title of the article is accurate, and I think they did a great job of demonstrating it. It's funny you mention pretentious people snootily correcting others, because in my experience the people who are wrong are usually the ones who go about that behavior. Just take a look at how the Angry Photographer responded to the original article Lee posted 2 years ago for a great example of this. It may be generally accepted that, in practice, you use a longer focal length for this effect, but that's a lesson about using the right tool for the job, not about how compression actually works. I still classify that as an important distinction because it's the truth.

Look man, the point is it's not a big deal regardless of what you call it. Names are just words. We could call it "spasmagoria" and whatever the word is describing would still just be what it is. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Love the video, still think the title premise is kind of click-baity.

The difference is that you’re focusing on the “what” (i.e. the words) and I’m talking about the “how” (as in how it actually works). Sure you can call it whatever you want, whether it’s “spasmagoria” or “imadoofus”, but that doesn’t change the fact that I can use a 50mm lens on a high resolution camera and, in a pinch, still get a perfectly good picture with the compression typically associated with an 85mm lens if I simply back up and crop later. Granted, there will be some differences with DOF, but since I know how that works too, I can account for it when I’m taking the picture.

On the other hand, if we do it your way and just throw our hands up and say “it’s not a big deal names are just words I don’t actually have to know anything”, you’d have to run home and get the 85mm lens if you didn’t bring it with you. That’s the difference. It’s not a big deal if you personally don’t care about the distinction, but it does matter and it should be taught.

What is the eyeball, friend? It is a sensor with a lens. Without which we have zero biological way to interact with visible light. Everything ever biologically perceived by a human being using visible light has been experienced through a lens. With no lens, there is no eye. With no eye, there is no tool to even conceive of a concept of light, much less how that light interacts with the manifested world around us. Without that tool, the word "perspective" (as understood in the context of this video and article) would be utterly meaningless to the human mind... the sort of thing that could only be theorized about in the same way we attempt to understand what lay beyond our abilities to perceive in the universe at large. So again, words are just words, you can shift them around and have fun with it. Go nuts. But I stand by what I said, my man. Lens Compression for life dude. =)

Also, I did not say the concepts should not be taught. Read what I wrote again. In fact, I said (and meant) that I love this video. I just think the title is click baity. That's all. This is no great sin. I am simply engaging his video at the same cheeky level he created the premise of his title. So, if you'd like to address that, I'm all ears.

I would claim that your perfectly capable of observing this phenomena just by using your eyes for seeing and legs for walking...

It has always been natural to me what really happens, (Draw perspective lines between your viewpoint, subject and background is a far easier way to describe this IMO)...

That being said, I wouldn't say that it is entirely incorrect to tie the lens to the phenomena in photography as it is a property of the lens that allows you to achieve this with acceptable quality, and IMO this article shows that as well...

While you can use the 24mm in the first image and crop it to get the same perspective, the result is horrible... As for the bike, that is only half bad yet took how much longer to make?...

Refer to the above response. And to add to it a little, other animals with different types of eyes perceive the world differently than our own eyes. They have their own lenses, which, create a perception of perspective different from our own. However, the physics of the principal explained in the video would be the same, but still dependent on a lens (the biological lenses necessary for eyeballs) to be perceived. There is no way around lenses as the world exists now if one wants to have a discussion about anything that can be perceived with visible light. Even at a mathematical level, all relevant geometric equations used to calculate any of the physics of perspective would require a lens (and a numerical knowledge of that lenses geometry) in order to explain the phenomena of perspective scientifically. So again, Lens Compression fo' life! =)

Which lens has better compression? the Sigma 70-200 or the Tamron 70-200?
Is a question i heard being asked...

Really well-explained guys makes total sense now.

Great video and article. A camera sensor is flat but a human retina is curved inside. The image projected to retina is closer to the real world since our eye ball is a sphere. On a flat sensor, all subjects projected away from the center will be distorted. Think of replacing your retina with a flat sensor behind it. The subjects further away from center will have more distortion. That also explain why wide lens has more distortion than tele. Microsoft developed a curved sensor mimicking human, which is sharper than any 1D.

This seems all fun and nice, but this is fact: https://i.imgur.com/mfZwYC6.png