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For macro, you really can't beat micro 4/3s, since you get double the depth of field.
I'm going to stick with my D500 for a while.
Me too. I love the camera. Question though @MK Do you fine tune your lenses for the body?I haven't but might need a nudge to try it on a lense.I'm a little intimidated by the process.
Can you explain how DOF is doubled as this article says the f-stop is doubled meaning DOF is halved. "Thus, a Micro-Four-Thirds camera gives us less (shallow) Depth of Field at similar focal lengths when compared with a full-frame camera. For example, an image shot at f/1.8 on a Micro-Four-Thirds camera would give an output similar to an image shot at f/3.6 on a full-frame camera, and f/2.7 on a crop sensor camera." https://digital-photography-school.com/camera-sensors-explained/
Yes, we're saying the same thing. The micro 4/3 lens I have is sharpest at F4.5, which looks like F9 full frame. In macro, you generally want deeper DoF (so more is in focus). Pushing it further, f8 in micro 4/3 still looks sharp. However, f16 in fullframe starts to show a little diffraction.Again, if you want to focus stack everything, it doesn't matter.
Get where you are coming from but I view DOF as a range and what you are describing is a shift away from the shallow end towards the deeper end which is good for close up shooting but would apply to everything that you photograph with the camera. I didn't stay with a crop sensor because I did not like the anlge of view being less wide on all my 35mm lenses.