At 50mm at an aperture of f/22 you'd need to be 13 feet away from the rails (your subject) to have focus all the way from 6.3ft to infinity. If for example your subject distance was 5 feet away, you'd only have from 3.75 feet to 8.34 feet in focus at the same focal length and aperture.
Thats just the begining Arthur.
Today is our 15th. And the fun has just begun
( and by fun, I mean the fight - you know that, surely)
Thinking some more about this comment you could extend the same notion to exposure, the meter has little concept of what the photographer values as important. Between hyperfocal and pre-metering for skintones you can get perfectly automation out of a manual camera! For street work anyway.In an ideal world AF would be the answer but it's just as likely to focus on the gap between people.
Still fight now and then though![]()
Thinking some more about this comment you could extend the same notion to exposure, the meter has little concept of what the photographer values as important. Between hyperfocal and pre-metering for skintones you can get perfectly automation out of a manual camera! For street work anyway.
Nice ones Andy and Thmaga
Its in the shots like your last one, Thmaga, that hyper focussing comes in handy
I'm not so sure how well the hyperfocal distance technique would work there, the rails in the foreground are probably too close. If you stood back a little you may be OK.
I agree and not sure why you would want Hyperfocal focusing here at all. It is not like a street shot where time is important.
If you have photoshop, a quick fix way of getting rid of that disgusting colour cast is to select a black point of the image using the levels adjustment layer (highlighted with the pink circles). I set it to the shadow of the pole, and then set the white level to the whitest part of the cloud (green circles). It's not the best solution as you can see by the 'holes' in the histogram, but at least it should give a better representation.
"disgusting colourcast"?
**Edit - oh right, that one... only saw it when I adjusted. Old eyes, see. (or rather don't)
Velvia has green cast shadows? oh ok
At 50mm at an aperture of f/22 you'd need to be 13 feet away from the rails (your subject) to have focus all the way from 6.3ft to infinity. If for example your subject distance was 5 feet away, you'd only have from 3.75 feet to 8.34 feet in focus at the same focal length and aperture.
Can you please elaborate on the pre-metering . Are you talking about metering off a standard tone - grass or the palm of the hand and set the meter to that. I sometimes do that, especially when there is strong sun and shadow. Or is there some other technique.
A couple of shots from my Pentax MX and the 28mm f2.8 SMC-M lens. The film was Kodak BW400CN developed (and badly marked) by Tesco.
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Thats a great set of people shots rrespective of what thet are taken on
I meant to comment on this one but got ditracted. What do you mean by (and badly marked) by Tesco. ?
To my eyes they both look pretty good but especially this one. BW400CN usually has that purple tint and these do not. These look more like Ilford XP-2 which is a good thing.
I'm quite pleased with BW400CN. I've found XP2 sometimes a bit too contrasty and grainy.
This from my first lot of film taken on a Canon AE-1.
I really must try my dads olympus om film camera. The pics on here do look nice i must admit.

A beautiful classic!
Just one from me, again an old one as I am having to wait until I have finished all of my films before sending them off
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AE-1 - 50mm - Provia 100
This from my first lot of film taken on a Canon AE-1.
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I love the tone, what film is this?
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Another image from my crown graphic, I seem to be having problems with fomapan as I keeping getting spots all over the negs![]()