john_van_v
Well-known
Focus may be difficult, but my Jupiter-8 still continues to take dramatic pictures. Portraits under bright sunlight, billowy clouds, nature under an overcast and even night shots of power sub-stations, seem to be its niches.
Film is bw400cn and the camera is a Bessa R.
One near the bottom, a rusty chain link fence with a dried leaf stuck on it, I think shows the lens's potential for clarity -- if focused correctly. I have been pacing off meters; my stride is a few inches over a yard, close to a meter. (I have a few rangefinders for shoe mounts, but they all measure in feet, so I will be looking for one that measures in meters.)













Thinman.com -> more_jupiter-8_magic
Film is bw400cn and the camera is a Bessa R.
One near the bottom, a rusty chain link fence with a dried leaf stuck on it, I think shows the lens's potential for clarity -- if focused correctly. I have been pacing off meters; my stride is a few inches over a yard, close to a meter. (I have a few rangefinders for shoe mounts, but they all measure in feet, so I will be looking for one that measures in meters.)













Thinman.com -> more_jupiter-8_magic
cameramanic
Following the light
Jupiter Great
Jupiter Great
Hi John,
I have just looked at your photos, the Jupiter 8 is great lens, but like all lenses you must have someone with an eye for a great photograph to go with it.
You have got that eye. well done.
Cameramanic
Jupiter Great
Hi John,
I have just looked at your photos, the Jupiter 8 is great lens, but like all lenses you must have someone with an eye for a great photograph to go with it.
You have got that eye. well done.
Cameramanic
john_van_v
Well-known
thank you so much, I wish it were as easy to lend an eye as a handcameramanic said:you must have someone with an eye for a great photograph to go with it.
You have got that eye. well done.
Cameramanic
payasam
a.k.a. Mukul Dube
The camera's "eye" has only to capture what the photographer's eye sees. Converting metres to feet is not so difficult. I do it constantly when using FSU lenses with an accessory V/F marked in feet.
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