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Posts Tagged ‘Lens’

Tamron 28-75mm f2.8 lens review

11 Dec

dombowerphoto.blogspot.com this review really should cover everything you will ever need to know about this lens If you enjoy myvideos please post them on your Facebook page and let others know about this channel, please SUBSCRIBE and share on Facebook and Twitter. Also check out the links below. If you really like my work please feel free to check out or buy a copy of the my PHOTOGRAPHY BOOK: Getting There With Photography: By Dom Bower www.blurb.com FACEBOOK Critique/advice GROUP www.facebook.com FACEBOOK PAGE www.facebook.com TWITTER page twitter.com WEBSITE www.dombower.com PHOTOGRAPHY CLOTHING Point and destroy clothing http please donate to a charitable cause visit www.justgiving.com and the blog www.dombowerphoto.blogspot.co.uk
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Adorama TV presents how to set up lighting for Group Shots. This week, Mark demonstrates how to light a large or small group of people indoors with a single light source. Mark uses the Inverse Square law to calculate how the size of the light source and the distance from the light source to the subjects can create even, flattering light. Be sure to watch to the very end of this video! For more articles and videos about portraits and lighting, go here: www.adorama.com Products used in this episode: Matthews Baby Junior Triple Riser Stand with Wheels www.adorama.com Flashpoint 60″ x 60″ PZ Octabox. 5 Foot Octabox www.adorama.com Flashpoint Speed Ring Adapter to fit Profoto www.adorama.com Profoto Acute2R 1200 Pro Value Pack #900795 www.adorama.com Nikon D3S Body Only www.adorama.com Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S Wide Angle-Telephoto Zoom Nikkor Lens www.adorama.com Benro A0690TBH00 Travel Angel Aluminum Tripod www.adorama.com Pocket-Wizard Plus II www.adorama.com Visit the Adorama Learning Center for more AdoramaTV videos. www.adorama.com

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Nikon 35mm f2 AF-D Review: Why Zach Arias and Myself Like This Lens

09 Dec

www.artoftheimage.com – Reviewing the Nikon 35mm f2.0 AF-D. Why Zach Arias and myself like this lens. Check out Zach’s site at http

 
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5 Ways to Get Creative with a Fisheye Lens

07 Dec

A fisheye lens is easily one of the best ways to get creative and have a blast with photography. As far as lenses go, a fisheye is relatively cheap (around $ 650) making them accessible to a wide group of photogs. It’s important to know what a fisheye lens is, where it came from, and where the uses of a fisheye lens begin and end.

Originally used for meteorology to study the sky and cloud formations, fisheye’s were originally called “whole-sky lenses.” These lenses quickly became popular in the general photography field because of their fun and unique uses, and of course their incredibly distorted lines. They can be used for many different purposes, both professional and for fun (but mostly for fun). Here are 5 creative ways to use a fisheye lens that you can implement immediately…

1. Radial Blur

Shooting a wedding reception with a fisheye lens can be an absolute blast. These receptions are usually in low light and are a challenge to get great images out of. When I’m shooting a reception, I get right in the middle of the dance floor and just shoot away. To get this radial-blur effect, simply slow down your shutter speed to around 1/25th of a second. Next, you need to spin the camera 90 degrees counter clockwise. To do this, simply cradle the lens with your left hand while using your right hand to pivot the camera body around. Not every image is going to come out, but you can almost always walk away with a few keepers.

2. Exaggerate the Curvature of the Earth

One thing to note when using a fisheye lens is this: The further you move an object or line to the edge of the frame, the more distorted it becomes. If you place the horizon in the middle of the frame, it will be perfectly straight across the entire image. The exaggerate this distortion, place the horizon dangerously close to the top of the frame. Just be careful, you might get home and find your legs in the bottom of the frame ;-) .

3. Shoot Super Wide Landscapes Without The Fisheye Look

Sometimes, a fisheye can be used simply to capture everything you want in a scene. Sometimes, you don’t want distorted lines but still need that super wide angle. If you have a landscape without straight lines (buildings, trees, telephone poles, etc) you can sometimes position the lens in a way that it simply looks like a wide angle lens. Just make sure your horizon is towards the middle of the frame. Doing this will allow you to capture a nearly 180 degree view of a scene while avoiding the distorted, crazy look of a fisheye lens.

4. Capture Entire Ceilings

There’s no way you could capture this much of a ceiling with a normal lens. This was taken at the Gaylor Texan in Grapevine, Texas and this ceiling is absolutely massive. With symmetrical architecture like this, a lot of times there will be a clear marker on the ground to signify the exact middle of the room. When I looked up and saw this site, my fisheye was the only lens that crossed my mind!

5. Change Your Perspective and Embrace Those Lines!

The most important thing is to have fun Whether you’re shooting for fun, or for clients (as pictured above). A fisheye is a prime lens, meaning that you can’t zoom in or out with it. Therefore, it’s up to you to act as the zoom for the lens. Be sure to change perspectives and experiment with different angles and lines. Get down low to the ground, even if it means laying on your stomach in the gravel on a railroad track. Lean up against a wall and use the distortion of the lens to wrap the wall around the frame. Just have fun!

If you have examples of fisheye photography that you’d like to share, be sure and leave a link in the comments below!

Also – Check out these 15 Fun and Fabulous Fisheye Photos for a little more inspiration!

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

5 Ways to Get Creative with a Fisheye Lens


Digital Photography School

 
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Call Me Crazy: LS Lens DSLR Adapter Tube Concept

06 Dec

See this? This is an 80mm lens from my old Hasselblad film camera. It was built 50 years ago. The leaf shutter is built into the lens. It syncs at 1/500th of a second.

My current 80/2.8LS is a PhaseOne leaf-shutter lens. It syncs at 1/1600th. And it would be very possible—perhaps even simple—to manufacture an inexpensive tube to marry a PhaseOne LS lens to a Nikon or Canon DSLR.

Why, and how, inside. Read more »


Strobist

 
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Posted in Photography

 

Updated: DSLR and Lens Buying Guides

05 Dec

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We’ve just updated our DSLR and lens buying guides to cover recent developments in both product segments. Our buyers’ guides are intended to provide a helping hand when it comes to deciding what to buy, and include summaries of some of the main things to look for, and explanations of the strengths and weaknesses of various options as well as common terminology. Click through for links to our updated versions of both articles. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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How to Pick the Best DSLR Lens – WOMP

05 Dec

In this episode we do a shoot-out of four brands of “professional” lenses to see which is best for your DSLR. What is the best lens to spend your hard-earned cash on? Do the camera-brand lenses from Nikon and Canon outshine the much-cheaper 3rd party kit? To save your sanity when shopping for a lens, we put them head to head. It’s a complicated topic, and for sure there are some things that are beyond the scope of the video. So if you’re really considering purchasing one of these lenses, check out the more-detailed write-up at www.crisislab.com. Featuring Kevin Good, John Pellett, Shanta Parasuraman Created with the tireless help of:: Paul Good, Jenna St. John Music: The Static www.the-static.com (recorded at Sonic Sweets) ossi & (c)AndyBoy! soundcloud.com Thanks to: Marc Alexander, Suzanne Robertson Want to figure out the right lens for your camera? In this episode, Kevin runs an entertaining experiment on the best 24-70mm f2.8 lenses available, the Canon EF, the Nikon AF-S, the Tamron SP, and the Sigma, to see which one holds the most bang for its buck. Elements like the best sharpness, bokeh, vignetting and brightness, and optical stabilization are put into account, and Kevin and John pick their winner. Let us know in the comments what you think! Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8: rcm.amazon.com Nikon AF-S: rcm.amazon.com Tamron SP: rcm.amazon.com Sigma: rcm.amazon.com Subscribe to BAMMO: bit.ly Share on Facebook: ow.ly and Twitter: ow.ly Created by: Kevin Good Executive Producer

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Nikon D800 ????? Official D-Movies Through The Lens

02 Dec

Multi-Area Mode Full HD D-Movie — Recording Movies Using One Of Two Formats The D800 records movies with superior resolution through optimal information processing acquired from the 36.3-million pixel image sensor. Users can record 1920 × 1080p/30-fps full-HD movies using either the FX-based movie format or the DX-based movie format according to shooting conditions. The FX-based movie format offers a shallow depth-of-field with an emphasis on blur characteristics, while the DX-based movie format brings subjects closer when lenses with short focal lengths are used. The camera is also equipped with a headphone jack and supports precise adjustment of microphone sensitivity. In addition, users can play back movies or view the live recording of movies simultaneously via the camera’s monitor and on an external monitor. The D800 also responds to the needs of professionals who require uncompressed movie files; professional users can link the movie live view mode to an external HDMI monitor, as well as record movies simultaneously onto an external device via the HDMI link. Nikon’s newest digital SLR camera also features a time-lapse photography function that captures images at a selected interval and then combines the images to create a time-lapse movie. A time-lapse movie shows the changes in a particular scene that occur over time. I AM THE DIRECTOR iam.nikon-asia.com Cinematography by Andrzej Sekula Directed by Cellin Gluck
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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5 Reasons Why You Need a 50mm lens

28 Nov

A video explaining why you ought to have a 50mm lens in your arsenal. Pricing Reference: Nikon D700 – www.digitalrev.com Nikon 50mm f/1.8G – www.digitalrev.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

more at timelapsehq.com Recently I managed to get my hands on a Nikon D7000. I spent every waking minute getting to know this camera. The D7000 is said to be the next version of the D90. For the least part it is targeting the same market. The D7000 comes with a 39 focus points, which is a great deal more than the 11 that is set on the D90. The D7000 comes with a newly developed DX-format CMOS sensor. Two huge features for time-lapse photography on the D7000 are the double SD card slots, which means more images can be captured across two cards, and the built in Intervalometer. Both of these features were missing on the D90. With a built in intervalometer, this means you can perform time-lapse photography right there on the camera for the D7000, such a handy feature with no need to use a camera remote or tether to a laptop. The D7000 has an amazing picture control feature allowing you to set various adjustments to pictures right there on the camera. The D7000 also carries your standard D-lighting adjustments onboard the camera. Video on the D7000 is impressive to say the least. Although the auto focus while filming a moving subject is not the greatest. Hopefully they will fix this with some firmware upgrades.

 
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Nikon 24-70 Lens Travel Mug

28 Nov

Nikon/Nikkor Lens Coffee Cup looks pretty much the same as the real one with zoom-in and out feature. MA/M button is switchable. Very good in every detail. Nikon lovers should not miss it. It is awesome.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

*Turn up your speakers so you can clearly hear the music! Listen with BOTH speakers (voiceovers are on the left side)* This video is part of a project created for Ms. Cordero’s Sophomore English Honors (Period 3) at Arcadia High School, Arcadia, California. The novel Candide is reviewed in the video up to the point before introducing El Dorado, where Candide meets an ideal land where the jewels are used to pave the roads. Martin and Candide (as well as other characters) then go through a series of travelling where they are plucked away of their wealth gained at El Dorado. Eventually, the characters are able to meet up again using Candide’s wealth, and live their life by farming. You are permitted to use this video for only educational purposes, but if you are presenting as a project I would highly suggest to make your own video. It is a fun process that makes one think what is actually important. _________________ Music Selections: -Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin- Cover/Performed by Richard Clayderman -Ballade No. 4 in F Minor, Op. 52 by Frederic Chopin- Performed by Yundi Li -Giants Dance At Midnight by Rich Smith -The Crying Spirit by Rich Smith -The Loveable Chipmunk by Rich Smith -The Raging Fire by Rich Smith Richard Clayderman’s performance is from his CD, Richard Clayderman- Concerto, while Yundi Li’s performance is from his CD, 14th International Frederick Chopin Piano Competition, and Rich Smith’s compositions are from his CD, The Giant Forest

 
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** NIKON D70s PICTURES USING 18-70mm Kit lens – SLIDESHOW – MARCH 27th 2010 – DSLR CAMERA **

27 Nov

This is a video slide show of some pictures I took with my D70s, which was the successor to the D70. I got this camera a couple of weeks ago as a backup for my D90. I went to London yesterday and thought I would take some pictures and see how this 5 year old D70s performs. I was actually really pleased with its performance. Every picture that was taken was a handheld shot, and I used ISO 200 during the day, and ISO 800 for the night shots. The only lens used for all the pictures was the 18-70mm nikon kit lens. The D70s has been known to shoot 13 to 14 times what it’s been rated, some have even shot over 150000 shots with it and it’s still going. I have to say this camera is built like a tank.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Nikon Coolpix L120 HandBDigital.com Video Review Bryant Park New York City, NY Specs: 14.1MP CCD Sensor 21x Wide-Angle 25-525mm (Equiv) Lens 5-Way VR Image Stabilization System 3″ High Resolution 921K-Dot Display Sensitivity to 6400 ISO 720p HD Video W/Stereo Sound Up to 15.3fps Sport Continuous Shooting Easy Auto Mode/Smart Portrait System In-Camera Editing Functions 17 Scene Modes Inc. Pet Portrait Mode H AND B DIGITAL 29 West 46th St (Between 5th & 6th Ave) 212-354-1341 HandBDigital.com/LensTesting

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos