Yesterday I was taking photos using Live View engaged and noticed a few shots with an aperture of less than F5.6 vignetting on one side. So today I did some testing using various lens and various apertures, findings were somewhat interesting.
When taking a photo with a Canon EF lens ( 180mm Macro, 135 SF, 85 L and 50 1.0L) this glitch did not appear whether live view engaged or not. Photos were fine both ways.
But with an Alternate lens (Angenieux 180mm, Nikon 135 DC, and Leica 180mm) on and aperture set to less than 5.6 and live view engaged vignetting appeared badly on one side. But if I disengaged live view before taking the shot, the picture turned out fine. If aperture was F5.6 or higher no vignetting..
See samples below right shot is with Live View engaged. No post processing done on the shots except resizing.
I had 3 different 5D MKII's I tried this on and they all produced the same results. Live View on the 5D's was set to stills only. Curious if others have tried shooting with Live view engaged and alternate lens attached or have tried video with an alternate and aperture less than F5.6.
Raw. I thought it might be an adapter issue but though not shown above th Leica also did the samething. I at least have the work around by turning off live view after focusing and then shoot. And I agree wierd since it only does it with Alts.
Call canon and see what they say, most likely nothing as your using an adapter? I really wish I could help as I love shooting with live view, it kicks ass haha
this is wierd. It can't be the mirror, since the mirror is up during liveview shooting. I had the reverse problem, where when I shot at infinity with the rokkor w/o liveview, the mirror would block the light path, but there was no problem otherwise.
Does this only happen at infinity? Try at shorter distances...
Does this happen in the landscape orientation, too? Maybe the mirror is not fully locked up. Does this go away if you turn the camera upside down? I didn't see this on 1Ds3.
PSquared63 wrote:
Does this happen in the landscape orientation, too? Maybe the mirror is not fully locked up. Does this go away if you turn the camera upside down? I didn't see this on 1Ds3.
Hmm. I read "side" and thought landscape, but if indeed they're only resized then of course these are portraits and the shutter's out as a cause. I wonder if looking into the mirror box and rotating the camera with live view engaged and no lens attached would be at all interesting...
I first noticed on Saturday in portrait mode but only on 1 camera. Distance was about 20 feet. The shots I took Sunday as seen above was deliberately done in portrait mode to see if it reoccurred and if it occurred on all bodies.
In landscape mode I didn't notice it on Saturday but it was possible it was there as I was shooting into snow so the bottom of a few shots had a slight blue tinge to it.
I'll will likely try a few shots again this weekend assuming weather cooperates using some other alternates to see if it happens to them too. And try different orientations.
Both Saturday and Sunday they were shot tripod mounted.
Another thought I had was the position of the sun but Saturday shots were in two different directions and Sunday an entirely different direction and then it clouded up shots above were after clouding up.
I basically view this now as a glitch and not a big issue for myself since my work around is focus with live view turn off live view for alts then shoot. Or shoot at aperture setting of F5.6 though F32. With Canon lenses just shoot away no issue.
I'll let you know what I find next tiime I shoot. Though I'll have 1 less 5d MKII to test with. I have sent one off to Lifepixel for conversion to full spectrum.
I have noticed differences in using LiveView with flash. I have a 14EX ring flash connected to the Leica APO 100mm macro. When I use the viewfinder, the shots are ok but when I use live view, it is blurry, like motion blur. Anyone has the same experience? I will play with it some more to fiigure out what is going on.
Turns out with LiveView and Flash is used, the mirror comes back down (I believe it is for ETTL metering?) and then goes back up again before it takes the shot. I think I started to move the camera once I heard the first shutter movement hence I got motion blur. I have to remember that next time.
Went out today and was able to reproduce including shooting upside dwon. Used the Angeneiuex 180, Leica 180, Canon 180 Macro with same results. I also used the coastal Optics 60mm and Nikon 28mm lens Intersetingly enough the Nikon did not produce this. It occurs only on the opposite side of the mirror, not as noticable when camera in landscape positioning but there none the less. Anyways I see this as an inconvience glitch, I'll just turn off Live View after focusing for non Canon lens. Todays shots were near infinity focusing.