Other fixed-focus cameras include those for prison mug-shots. The MPP Prison camera, for example, has a fixed-focus 135mm or 150mm lens for two exposures on 4×5 in. sheet film.[3]

MTFSCP

A similar but distinct umbrella term to the trans-feminine spectrum is the male-to-female spectrum (MtF spectrum), meaning that they were assigned male at birth, and transition in a more female direction. This term is also not limited to people who specifically identify as women. "Trans-feminine" and "MtF spectrum" carry different nuances of meaning that may suit people in different ways. Trans-feminine doesn't call out someone's birth assignment, but does call out their gender expression as being feminine. There are trans women who prefer a more butch than feminine gender expression. Meanwhile, MtF spectrum doesn't specify one's gender expression as being feminine, calls out one's birth assignment, but transgender people can feel uncomfortable with having their gender assignment pointed out. Due to these nuances, people may feel that one term is more suitable than the other for their own comfort and for the most accurate description of their identity.

MTFlist

The cameras built into cheaper mobile phones are fixed focus (although they may add a "macro" switch for two focusing distances rather than one).

Fixed focus is generally only used on the cheapest cameras of any period. Box cameras are usually fixed-focus, as are the cheapest toy cameras. Traditionally the next rung above fixed focus has been guess focusing (zone focusing).

Mtf wikiscp foundation

Some neutrois people [neutrois is a specific nonbinary identity that is neither male nor female] feel they aren’t completely 100% gender-free or gender-neutral; rather, they lean a little more towards one side or another of the gender spectrum. Transfeminine means the person tilts towards female [...] It’s important to note this does not invalidate, contradict, or cancel out being neutrois, as they still feel a strong affinity with this identity. Instead, being transmasculine [...] is more of a modifier or a complement which adds to the complexity of their gender, gender expression, or gender identity. In these cases there might be a preference to present more closely to one gender over another, or it can be more comfortable to just live as one binary gender rather than the other. However, this choice is more often a result of convenience in order to navigate a society in which only two genders are recognized. A lot of people would ideally opt to have neutrois recognized as their gender and not be forced to make a decision between male and female only.

Transfeminine (also written trans-feminine or trans feminine, sometimes abbreviated to transfem or transfemme[note 1], and sometimes known as cross-feminine or cross-femme[citation needed]) describes a person, transgender or otherwise (generally but not exclusively one who was assigned male at birth) who seeks to present femininely, identifies as more female than male, or wishes to transition to look more feminine. In general, although not exclusively, the prefix "cross-" is used by individuals who do not wish to nor believe themselves to be in transition, but still does not align their life-style or gender choice to be in full or partial synchrony with their physical sex.[citation needed]

The word "transfeminine" was used in a 1985 issue of The TV-TS Tapestry, a magazine "for persons interested in crossdressing & transsexualism". In that issue, Jane Nance wrote about the difficulties of describing herself with the then-current terminology: Since Jane felt her identity was fully womanly, she did not want to identify as "transvestite", and since she did not want surgical transition she felt that "transsexual" was not accurate either, and neither was "transgenderist", since "I'm living and functioning in the world most of time in the male role." She proposed "transfeminine" as a possibility and said that the definition could be "a male who feels like a female, strictly undefined in relation to any issue of an operation".[4] This might or might not be the first recorded usage of the word "transfeminine".

A camera with a fixed focus (or "panfocus") lens has no focus control. The focus is preset by the designer, usually at a distance for which depth of field will reach infinity even at the greatest aperture possible with the lens.

Mtf wikigithub

Mtf wikiscp

Depth of field decreases with focal length and aperture. As the focal length of a "standard" lens decreases with the frame area, a fixed-focus camera for 127 or 35mm film is typically more useful than (because it has a greater depth of field than) one for 120 film.

As autofocusing logic, circuitry and mechanisms became better and cheaper, autofocus models seem to have largely supplanted fixed-focus cameras. However, fixed-focus cameras survived in the marketplace for a long time, thanks in part to the improvement of emulsions for fast films and to small, built-in electronic flashguns. As an example, the Fuji Hi! Mickey Mouse camera of 1995 has such a built-in flashgun, an 33mm f/8 lens;[1] the hyperfocal distance for such a lens is about 4.6m and if this is indeed its fixed focus then at f/8 everything from 2.3m to infinity is in focus (at f/16, everything from 1.52m).[2]

The labels can be considered to be a gender identity, a gender expression, or both. It is an umbrella term that includes trans women who don't consider themselves nonbinary, and nonbinary feminine people.[1][2] Some examples of genders that transfeminine individuals may identify as include:

Notable people who consider their identity to be outside the Western gender binary, and who describe themselves with the word "transfeminine," include: