kosta_g
Well-known
I love the second shot Emiliano.
Thanks, it's my car under the rain 🙂
Shooting on film with a Leica, driving this car....for all the people around me i'm coming from the past with a time machine.
I was noticing a strong vignetting in my last few shoots with the Canon 35\1.5 i suspect it's the filter, i have bought this lens years ago with all the original accessories and the filter it's an UVa Canon filter 48mm...it look like the same period of the lens, but probably it's not the correct one, i don't know, anyway without this filter the lens doesn't show this black corner.
I was noticing a strong vignetting in my last few shoots with the Canon 35\1.5 i suspect it's the filter, i have bought this lens years ago with all the original accessories and the filter it's an UVa Canon filter 48mm...it look like the same period of the lens, but probably it's not the correct one, i don't know, anyway without this filter the lens doesn't show this black corner.
Nice lens, car and pix, there.
The correct filter is what Canon called "Slimline" and it is flat-fronted, only threaded on the rear. The complete set of original 48mm Canon Slimline filters came in color-coded, bakelite tube that screwed together, so very neatly organized and safe. I found a complete set on Ebay last year, for a good price.
Regular double-threaded filters -do- vignette. Hence the special "Slimlines".
I must have been very fortunate, in that I bought the Canon 19mm 3.5, 28mm 3.5, 28mm 2.8, and 35mm 1.5 back in the '70s. I used them in serious photojournalism for years on my Canon and Leica rfdrs, and they show it although all of them still perform splendidly. My 50mm lenses were/are the Summilux and Canon f/0.95, and my "long" rfdr lens, Nikkor 85 2.0. Their capabilities have not changed, they are splendid, lovely things to use and delight with every image.
I did find that using some of them at small apertures with a protective filter over the lens could cause ghosting from the white letters and numbers on the front lens-retaining ring, and filled in the white with flat black paint. They are lenses that have been "there and back," and show it, but by god they've been used right.
Thank you for helping me appreciate these old friends.
Perhaps I should stipulate that I disdain using any filter over my lenses, but there are conditions which can destroy lens coatings in very short order, such as the silicate blast from a diamond drill used to rescue miners from a collapsed gold mine tunnel. For that, I considered a filter excusable. The 19mm lens still shows that assignment.
I also have this problem, Ari. Maybe it better to get a screw-on off brand lens hood.