back alley
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one more thing, I remember that you have the 28/1.9. U sold that one already? in favor of the small size of 3.5? then no point to reverse, it will be really painful.
needed money, sold all my fast lenses.
the problem of being financially strapped at times.
Juan Valdenebro
Truth is beauty
I agree with most previous members here... What I do with the 3.5, just can't be done with the 2 or the 1.9... I use the 3.5 because it looks so very flat... Amazingly flat without hood... Obviously it's a fine lens, but it's a king when to its optical qualities we add the way it looks...
Most of the time I shoot it at f/8 and f/11 with Tri-X (400-3200) and prefocused... When I want speed, I prefer a 1.4 lens because I'll really need that aperture... In fact, I can shoot the 3.5 wide open in low light: f/3.5 and 1/60 are good for low light at 800 ISO, and f/16 1/500, more than seven stops above that, is normal overcast light... I mean, 3.5 is faster than most of my shooting, and why carry -instead of the tiny, sharp, distortion free 3.5- a big 28 all day (in my case) if I carry a small 40 1.4 for real low light, with the benefit of a second focal length?
And I don't need or ever want a fast 28: I use that focal length for street shooting, not for indoors or low light... I use a 28 to show what surrounds me, and that's done with my 28 stopped down always... With a fast 40 I get selective focus in a way a 28 couldn't even dream about, no matter its speed...
Cheers,
Juan
Most of the time I shoot it at f/8 and f/11 with Tri-X (400-3200) and prefocused... When I want speed, I prefer a 1.4 lens because I'll really need that aperture... In fact, I can shoot the 3.5 wide open in low light: f/3.5 and 1/60 are good for low light at 800 ISO, and f/16 1/500, more than seven stops above that, is normal overcast light... I mean, 3.5 is faster than most of my shooting, and why carry -instead of the tiny, sharp, distortion free 3.5- a big 28 all day (in my case) if I carry a small 40 1.4 for real low light, with the benefit of a second focal length?
And I don't need or ever want a fast 28: I use that focal length for street shooting, not for indoors or low light... I use a 28 to show what surrounds me, and that's done with my 28 stopped down always... With a fast 40 I get selective focus in a way a 28 couldn't even dream about, no matter its speed...
Cheers,
Juan
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back alley
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thanks for the responses to my querry...have decided to keep the tiny terror and just save up for a fast 40...
now that's a convincing argument...![]()
Yes, I should have elaborated. The 28mm 3.5 CV is the best budget 28mm lens out there. The fast 28mm CVs are either not that great (f/2, focus shift, generic IQ) or are just huge (both 1.9 / 2.0). I had the CV 28mm 3.5 and sold it when I bought the Elmarit ASPH 2.8. Used that for awhile and only saw slightly less distortion on the elmarit. For 1/4 of the price of the used elamrit, I decided the CV was the better lens for me. Sure, it's slow, but it is damn good.
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