pete hogan
Well-known
I'll second that, even though I only buy what I can afford...
Regards, David
Third it. There's only one other's opinion that I need to consider.
I'll second that, even though I only buy what I can afford...
Regards, David
No. They're matters of opinion, based on different estimates of enlargement sizes and viewing distances. Stop and think about it for a moment.. . . The DoF figures can be looked up on any online DoF calculator. They are calculations based on optical laws and, being numbers, have only the meaning you care to attach to them. You can dismiss them if you want but they wont go away. 🙂
Well, that and theatre performances and outdoor concerts in the dark and bars and... Don't blame others for lack of imagination when it comes to subject matter.. . . Noctiluxes are made to shoot hydrants and benches in parks at night. . .
Monochrom said:Originally Posted by Monochrom View Post
. . . Noctiluxes are made to shoot hydrants and benches in parks at night. . .
Well, that and theatre performances and outdoor concerts in the dark and bars and... Don't blame others for lack of imagination when it comes to subject matter.
Cheers,
R.
Great argument! Thanks!Wait... hang on, Roger... whazzisname, the author who writes critical pieces about photography having never owned a camera... geez... uhhh... the book is called "the continuing moment" or something like that... I've got the book around here somewhere; I started it and put it down... but HE said that park benches and photos of the blind run as themes through ALL the great photographers' work and that those themes directly tie those photographers together!!!
I'm having an epiphany... so stream of consciousness thought here... so, if Noctiluxes are good for shooting park benches at night, and if all of the greats have park bench shots in their body of work, then it surely follows that if I buy a Noctilux AND make pictures of benches with it, that they will surely be the BEST park bench photos EVER, and I will most likely be regarded as one of the great photographers some day! Yeah! That's IT. That's the ticket! Wow! 🙄
I will most likely be regarded as one of the great photographers some day!
you over payed - look - most of the shot isn't even in focus!!😉Here is a bench..taken with my el cheapo Nocti F1..bought used back in the day for 1.3K..probably the last Leica lens I would ever give up..
Don't be so modest. Around here, you already are! 😀
Nice one Emile. Title it "hepcat's epiphany".
No. They're matters of opinion, based on different estimates of enlargement sizes and viewing distances. Stop and think about it for a moment.
Chees,
R.
I think your statement here is accurate. For me, judging exposure using ambient light through the viefinder is important as I don't rely on the camera's meter much at all. I can't trust them to be metering on what I want it to. Basically I "think and see" in manual focus and exposure.
EVFs, by their nature, amplify light and don't give a true view of "ambient." That causes you to have to trust what the camera is doing and you lose control. Or if you keep control, you have to adjust the camera to see the way you want it to see, and then, you can adjust your exposure/focus... which takes more time. They're just a nuisance to me. Now if that was the way I was "raised" I'm sure it'd be no problem at all. I'm just old enough tho, that I wasn't, and my "process" is very different from that an EVF requires. Don't misunderstand, I have a Panny GX-1 for a point and shoot, and it's great; but for serious work, I fall back to my M9P or M4P, or my Hassys.
Y'know... I can appreciate a camera like the Panny GX1 as a consumer box. It has enough dials and widgets to keep the most die-hard widget lover happy, but the program modes make it easy for the non-pro, non-avid-hobbyist public to use. But for a camera aimed at the "pro" market? Why all the complexity? Why should it be so complex? When it gets down to it, the three settings are shutter speed, ISO, and aperture. If a "pro" or "advanced amateur" has mastered the basics of photography, basic controls are really all that's necessary, and everything else they build in gets in the way of making images. Frankly, that's what brought me back to the M9. I look at the top of the line equipment from CaNikOly and wonder who they're really marketing them to.
Perhaps I sound like a grumpy old-timer, and I've talked about this before, but past sensor improvements, I think that much of what we see in new cameras is more gimmick to sell new equipment to people who already have serviceable gear than it is actual innovation.
The DoF figures aren't a matter of opinion: they're a matter of physics. There is a valid discussion about what is an acceptable level of sharpness for a given DoF and that is dependent on the factors you mention but the laws used to work out the DoF are immutable.
And given that the circumstances in the depth of field table just calculate a figure without knowing if it's a Noctilux or a Rokkor they're dealing with then the figures between the two lenses would still be comparable even if your argument were correct and different parameters were used in the calculation.
So whatever circles of confusion, enlargement sizes or viewing distances you want to use they're irrelevant for a DoF comparison between two lenses of the same focal length. And that comparison shows that there are cheaper ways of achieving the same wafer thin DoF - to within a centimetre or two at a distance of three meters - if that is what you are after. And that it is possible to get even narrower DoF than the Noctilux for a very small fraction of the price by using a 58mm f1.2 Rokkor.
Narrower DOF for the same focus distance, but not narrower DOF for the same field of view. Same FOV separation is determined by the focal length/aperture ratio, which is greater for the Noct, am I right?
And with the 58 1.2 the unwieldy adapter makes it even larger than the Noct on a mirrorless camera. The Rokkor is also seriously soft wide open - but I guess it is a very good lens for the price. The Noct-nikkor is no doubt much better, but they are upwards of $3k these days, and I don't want to own a lens so difficult to service...




