Beemermark
Veteran
When you go wide a few mm makes a big difference. 21 takes captures a much larger scene then a 25mm. Going to 18 mm it seems like it doubles again.
When you go wide a few mm makes a big difference. 21 takes captures a much larger scene then a 25mm. Going to 18 mm it seems like it doubles again.
Sounds like bias to me. Fuji does not make junk. Also, this bad copy, good copy stuff is blown out of proportion most of the time.My camera dealers says it was the luck of the draw, I just got a ' good Fuji' and an 'average' Nikon, whatever this means in technical terms. My take on this is, the Fuji is a newer lens than the Nikon.
What Dogman said. This is close to my own experience. My 24mm lenses will almost always satisfy my need for a wide lens. I have 35, 28, 25, 24, 21, 20,, 18 and 15mm. My Goldilocks wide angle lens is usually my 24mm. When 24mm is not wide enough, I don't reach for a 21 or 20; I go for the 18 or 15. My reason for owning a 21mm is for the magic of the 21mm Super-Angulon, more so than for its focal length.Maybe. Could be.
I usually stick with a 24/25 as my wide lens. I seldom use them but own 20, 21, 18 and 15mm. They all get used on occasions and I like them for the occasional really wide view. I agree that the wider the lens the more difficult it is to use effectively but when you need or want one, you gotta have it. And if you're a true lens junkie like me, well....
In days past, I've used a 24mm and 21mm interchangeably and never missed one when using the other. But I have noticed it when shooting a 25mm against a 21mm. It doesn't sound like much, but every digit makes a difference when you start getting that wide. A 21mm might actually do it for you.I've got a 25mm for my LTM Canon, but am thinking about a 21mm. Would I gain that much if I added a 21 mm for mainly street shooting ...
Yes, while you could have foot zoomed back to fit everything into the frame, the photo would be losing some of the depth it has and makes it compelling.In days past, I've used a 24mm and 21mm interchangeably and never missed one when using the other. But I have noticed it when shooting a 25mm against a 21mm. It doesn't sound like much, but every digit makes a difference when you start getting that wide. A 21mm might actually do it for you.
View attachment 4848060Leica M11-P, 21mm Ultron f/1.8 VM. In this case, a 25mm would have been too tight.
I certainly couldn't walk past this photographer without having a photo taken of me.I find the 21mm gets you into real perspective or depth to a photo much better than a 24-25mm. When Robert Capa said “If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough” he was talking about making the viewer feel they were really there. That's the depth of the frame one gets from being close as you can do with a 21mm. Those who struggle to deal with wides call it "distortion" but it is perspective or depth to some of us. So, it's what floats your boat.
View attachment 4848109
Just for grins, I set up the M10 Monochrom at 4 feet from my cluttered bookcase and shot one frame each with 10, 21, 28, 35, 43, and 50 mm lenses to give examples of the FoV range. Sorry, I don't have 25, 24, 19, or 15 mm lenses at present to make the set "complete", but I hope this is useful ...
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FoV-Comparison 2024
Sample photos using 10, 21, 28, 35, 43, and 50mm lenses on FF (Leica M10 Monochrom) for Field of View examplesflic.kr
enjoy! G
Wow, that 10mm is crazy wide, makes my 15mm look like a telephoto lens...
Great comparison, thank you.
I find the 21mm gets you into real perspective or depth to a photo much better than a 24-25mm. When Robert Capa said “If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough” he was talking about making the viewer feel they were really there. That's the depth of the frame one gets from being close as you can do with a 21mm. Those who struggle to deal with wides call it "distortion" but it is perspective or depth to some of us. So, it's what floats your boat.
View attachment 4848109
Since the subject was a flat field, do you think the photos would look any different if you would have just "foot zoomed" with a one fixed focal length lens?Just for grins, I set up the M10 Monochrom at 4 feet from my cluttered bookcase and shot one frame each with 10, 21, 28, 35, 43, and 50 mm lenses to give examples of the FoV range.
Aside from the fact that that wasn't the point of the exercise... nor is there room for such movement in my office ... I think it pretty obvious that if you are using rectilinear lenses and photographing a flat field with them, you can make one take almost exactly the same image as another by changing the camera to subject distance, up to the limits of flat field and perspective distortions. Of course, you can simulate moving back and forth to adjust framing by just doing a crop on an image from an ultra-wide lens to make it have the same image area as a longer lens. For instance:Since the subject was a flat field, do you think the photos would look any different if you would have just "foot zoomed" with a one fixed focal length lens?