Harlequin565
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 8,684
- Name
- Ian
- Edit My Images
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So I recently had a bit of a disaster fun trying to use my FD 135 f/2.8 for cat portraits. It didn't really work.
A good deal of my 35mm manual focus work is static subjects. For human portraits it's a "don't move" instruction whilst I focus and shoot. Cats though - don't listen and f/5.6 at 135mm still has a relatively shallow depth of field at close distances.
On MF, I tend to flip up the magnifier - apart from the 645n which has AF, so this is a 35mm format issue. MF I'm sorted.
I actually find the rangefinder patch so much easier to use than the SLR offerings. I have pretty poor eyesight. I need glasses for driving, different glasses for screen work and for close distance I have to go without.
However I wondered if perhaps my issue is the focussing screen? The particular version I have is the F-1n. I have the split microprism (E) screen: http://www.canon-photography.com/accessory-focus-screens.htm
Does anyone else have this issue, or is it just me? I'd like a nice 35mm portrait setup that I can get reliable results with *relatively* quickly. I know I can go AF with either Nikon or Canon EOS (would be starting from scratch with either system), but I wondered if perhaps I was "doing it wrong" with what I have. It doesn't feel like rangefinders were really designed for portraits, but at this point, I'm thinking of picking up a 90 or 135 in M mount "just to see". Sync speed is pants though.
A good deal of my 35mm manual focus work is static subjects. For human portraits it's a "don't move" instruction whilst I focus and shoot. Cats though - don't listen and f/5.6 at 135mm still has a relatively shallow depth of field at close distances.
On MF, I tend to flip up the magnifier - apart from the 645n which has AF, so this is a 35mm format issue. MF I'm sorted.
I actually find the rangefinder patch so much easier to use than the SLR offerings. I have pretty poor eyesight. I need glasses for driving, different glasses for screen work and for close distance I have to go without.
However I wondered if perhaps my issue is the focussing screen? The particular version I have is the F-1n. I have the split microprism (E) screen: http://www.canon-photography.com/accessory-focus-screens.htm
Does anyone else have this issue, or is it just me? I'd like a nice 35mm portrait setup that I can get reliable results with *relatively* quickly. I know I can go AF with either Nikon or Canon EOS (would be starting from scratch with either system), but I wondered if perhaps I was "doing it wrong" with what I have. It doesn't feel like rangefinders were really designed for portraits, but at this point, I'm thinking of picking up a 90 or 135 in M mount "just to see". Sync speed is pants though.