Calzone
Gear Whore #1
- Local time
- 11:52 PM
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 16,954
- Location
- The Gateway To The Hudson Highlands
I agree 100%. I've got the 2.8 version on FILM Nikons and am very happy w/ it. Just use faster film if you need an extra stop. BTW--the 24 makes a better/ deeper snap shooter on the street in hyperfocal setting. No focus-shoot.
I own and love the 24/2.0 AIS, but I have no experiance with the 28. IMHO 28 is too close to 35 and going to a 24 means I'm shooting an ultra-wide and not just a wide-angle. Part of the character of an ultra-wide is the distortion. I guess this is where I draw the line and define a 28 as a wide-ange and 24 as an ultrawide.
The 24/2.0 displays crisp contrast in B&W film.
85-90% of the time, I shoot at 5.6, meter off the back of my hand, and use the distance scale as a point and shoot. My rig is a F3 with a DA-2 sport finder and an AH-4 hand strap. This is a great quick shooter for steet and on the subway I can shoot from the chest if I'm standing.
The CRC allows focus as close as one-foot. An ultra-wide, focused close at F 2.0 is an interesting look, but this is only used about 10% of the time.
Basically I only use two F-stops with this lens, but I use it a lot like a rangefinder. I call this rig my "Street Machine." It is very easy to shoot a roll of film, but you have to get close. In NYC this is not a problem. At 5.6 I have sharp focus from 5 feet to infinity. When I raise the camera to my eye I just grab the shot. I'm not so sure a 28 would be as effective.
Calzone