Nikkor 35mm f/1.8....your opinion please -

The trick is to prevent the focus wheel on the camera from rotating using your shutter release finger (right hand) while you change the aperture with your left hand ;)

That seems reasonable. As great as those Nikons felt in the hand I couldn't get over the focus ring-aperture ring thing...
 
No vignetting, no distorsion, pleasant bokeh, no flare, very high sharpness all over the image frame from f/2.8 onwards : what else ?


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Nikon SP (1962) - W-Nikkor-C 35/1.8 classic (1959) - Neopan 400 in D76 1+1 - Prague 11/2008
 
No vignetting, no distorsion, pleasant bokeh, no flare, very high sharpness all over the image frame from f/2.8 onwards : what else ?


7183770922_9b1c6b1e46_b.jpg



7183769176_20b8c25272_b.jpg


Nikon SP (1962) - W-Nikkor-C 35/1.8 classic (1959) - Neopan 400 in D76 1+1 - Prague 11/2008

I'll tell you what else: What on Earth is going on with that horse and rider? There must be some crazy history there. :)

s-a
 
what I see on your first pic (blurred grass on the lower corners and vignetting on the upper corners) is very strange

I think I shot it at a large aperture, maybe f/2.8 or f/4, because the weather was foggy and quite dark. I wanted to get some "atmosphere" in the picture. The corners are not soft but unsharp as happens with most vintage wideangles at big apertures.

Erik.
 
I have of course found some softness in the corners at f/1.8 and f/2 but it goes away at f/2.8 onwards. The same for a slight amount of vignetting : gone at f/2.8 onwards.

I have to admit - I never use my lenses, whatever model they are, at apertures wider than f/2.8, in general...
 
They sometimes are, but it is often nice to use them at full aperture, just to blur the background of a portrait, or to get rid of that dull "everything sharp" in a picture.

Erik.
 
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