RFFan
Member
Recently when shooting my Canon FD system I have been religiously noting aperture and shutter speed values for each frame. I’ve undertaken this because I want, once and for all, to get a proper handle on which of my FD lenses really deliver the kind of sharpness I want in ‘hand-held’ situations.
This exercise has been quite an eye-opener. I always thought that I had steady hands when it came to holding a camera, and yet I find that shots taken with the FD 35/2.8 lens (a stunning lens by the way) at 1/60 are visibly sharper than shots at 1/30 even at 6 x 4ins. I know that shooting a 35mm lens at 1/30 technically fails the ‘shoot at a MINIMUM of 1/focal length’ rule but not by much.
This result surprised me because I have slides taken on Kodachrome 200 (farewell old friend!) inside a buddhist shrine in Japan shot hand-held on my Canon QL17 GIII at 1/8 sec (40mm lens) and the clarity and detail never ceases to amaze me. No doubt the absence of a mirror in the RF is a major factor but has anyone else experienced such a BIG difference in their ability to hand-hold an SLR v RF? May be I’ve got the DTs!?
This exercise has been quite an eye-opener. I always thought that I had steady hands when it came to holding a camera, and yet I find that shots taken with the FD 35/2.8 lens (a stunning lens by the way) at 1/60 are visibly sharper than shots at 1/30 even at 6 x 4ins. I know that shooting a 35mm lens at 1/30 technically fails the ‘shoot at a MINIMUM of 1/focal length’ rule but not by much.
This result surprised me because I have slides taken on Kodachrome 200 (farewell old friend!) inside a buddhist shrine in Japan shot hand-held on my Canon QL17 GIII at 1/8 sec (40mm lens) and the clarity and detail never ceases to amaze me. No doubt the absence of a mirror in the RF is a major factor but has anyone else experienced such a BIG difference in their ability to hand-hold an SLR v RF? May be I’ve got the DTs!?