Originally posted by bkpix Clackers,
Not quite sure what you mean by "change your shooting style."
Because Bob, if we stand side by side and take pictures of an average subject in average conditions, we'll both get an average picture. If I use a 28mm lens and you an 18mm, so will the guy beside us with an iPhone.
Shooting a model in a studio at a fashion workshop, whether we have a Canon 5D Mk IV or a Panasonic m43, we're getting the same shots at f11, 1/125s, ISO100.
There are differences to the cameras, though, here DxO in its flawed way maps out what you get for the extra money:
Pentax K-1 vs Pentax K-3 vs Pentax K-5
So you should be shooting to the advantage of your format … in landscapes, get less blown highlights because of the dynamic range, richness in portraits because of the colour depth, less graininess because of the ISO performance.
To shoot with my DA*55 on my K-1, I had to get in fifty percent closer to get the same composition, and look what that's done for the bokeh:
The wider angles go much wider and more spectacular. Here, the DA12-24 at 16mm on the K-1 had me standing so close I was getting the elongation of the limbs and pushing back of the head and torso that I wanted by perspective distortion: