back alley
IMAGES
the rollie (sp) 40mm sonnar...especially on the rd1 body
The 135mm focal length is perfect for head-and-shoulders portraits, as it puts the photographer about 5 ft from the subject.
I once assisted a wedding photographer and he told me, as a rule of thumb, to stay at least 5 ft away from the subject, to avoid perspective distortion. (One can, indeed, work around this, but it is still a good rule of thumb.)
I don't often shoot portraits, but I have 85mm, 100mm, and 135mm lenses for this purpose. For environmental portraits, I'll use shorter focal lengths (50mm and shorter).
- Murray
Is yours with the goggles Helen?
No , just normal M mount, 1965 , serial # 2154
Boy does your V1 cron look yummy, Beautiful rendering too
it used to be the 35 pre asph lux, foolishly sold it... But now I think it's the 35 2.8 Summaron
Why ? For it's classic 60's B&W film rendering / shots One & Three
and love the clean crisp look on digital / middle shot
[URL="https://flic.kr/p/2hz6UAy"]
my mind like tracks laid bare... by Helen Hill, on Flickr
Red coat,Green hat,Red Filter by Helen Hill, on Flickr
it used to be the 35 pre asph lux, foolishly sold it... But now I think it's the 35 2.8 Summaron
Why ? For it's classic 60's B&W film rendering / shots One & Three
and love the clean crisp look on digital / middle shot
[url=https://flic.kr/p/2hz6UAy]
my mind like tracks laid bare... by Helen Hill, on Flickr
Red coat,Green hat,Red Filter by Helen Hill, on Flickr