Yeah, I discovered that recently, with my 300mm f4L. It has a "Macro" range "|_____|" indicator at the closest focusing point. It really meant that I could use it to take decent close-ups without resorting to the 100mm Macro all the timeneuroanatomist said:.....either because the lens focuses kinda close or because it gets a reasonable mag.....
neuroanatomist said:The 8-15mm fisheye zoom achieves 0.39x mag!
Yep. Especially when it comes to putting it into the lens title/description. Tamron are one of the worst offenders of this; to them it means anything that does better than 1:10 magnification; which is basically every lens Canon makes, for example.neuroanatomist said:As stated above, it's marketing.
JRS said:Some lens have written on them the word MACRO to show the minimum focusing distance, why do they use the word "macro"? Or, at what minimum focusing distance a lens can be called macro?
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Wouldn't a fisheye lense be a MACKEREL lens?neuroanatomist said:The 8-15mm fisheye zoom achieves 0.39x mag!
TrumpetPower! said:Just to add to the confusion...some wide-angle lenses that can focus very closely, such as the TS-E 24 II and the 8-15 fisheye, can make for much more interesting "macro" lenses than a true, dedicated macro lens. They let you get super-close to your subject for an interesting perspective and generally do a great job at including enough of the surroundings to put it in context.
mrsfotografie said:TrumpetPower! said:Just to add to the confusion...some wide-angle lenses that can focus very closely, such as the TS-E 24 II and the 8-15 fisheye, can make for much more interesting "macro" lenses than a true, dedicated macro lens. They let you get super-close to your subject for an interesting perspective and generally do a great job at including enough of the surroundings to put it in context.
The Sigma 20mm f/1.8 is king at this although it has a macro ratio of 1:4
Edit: due to its MFD of 0.2 m.