philip_pj Offline Upload & Sell: On
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The 43mm is considered (rightly) to be a special purpose lens - 21mm (35mm eq) on a 4x5 aspect is not great for many compositions - lots of foreground. The 65mm is the most popular and for may the only one worth using consistently - for reasons of angle of view, VF compatibility, harmony with the aspect ratio and availability/cost. The 50mm was a late intro, not so many around 2nd hand. The 150mm is both very hard to focus accurately and suffers *very* shallow DOF for many subjects. It is also hard to use fast, lots of ring movement - another special purpose lens. Don't even think about the 210mm (Think that is the FL). The 80mm is wonderful in all aspects.
For those wanting in for less money the Mamiya 6 with the 50mm/75mm is much less $$ for great 6x6 quality, especially with the 50mm. All the Mamiya RF lenses fade to diffraction gracefully and have oodles of res to spare, so they do near/far landscapes very well at say f11/f13. The shutters are without peer. The big Fujis are primitive by comparison but do deliver the goods.
Drum scans are for those with huge amounts of time and patience, keen on chasing down the last 3-5% of IQ. Most frames only benefit if huge enlargements are needed and/or if the DR is very large or if exposure is off (talking E6 here). Imacons lack ICE, so best get good at spotting and antiseptic practices of film care. They also perform sharpening by default, to my knowledge. I advocate the best trade-off is a high quality desktop unit like the Nikon 9000 (caveat: must have glass holder) or my unit, a Minolta Multi Scan Pro with a Scanhancer on board and the mods suggested by Erik Van Goederen (apologies if I mis-spelt your name, Erik). The Minolta is much smaller/lighter and refuses to clip shadows. The Epsons do not have a good rep, but may have improved...I would get a high end N/M before another fancy lens.
To retain that beautiful E6/C41 colour, I load directly into PS with a suitable working space - Joseph Holmes' Chromespace 100 matches the gamut of most E6 emulsions extremely well, and most of his work is with Astia. I use and recommend Astia 100F for its 'malleability' in post, scannability and stately palette. JH's colour variants boost/reduce colour to what is required, and adjust gamut accordingly - very nice result by him. Of course if light is even and you can retain shadow detail nothing matches Velvia 50 for certain subjects. Agree with Tariq's recent post re the work that went into palette devt by K and F and the difficulty of repro'ing it in post.
Currently using a new A900 here in India, much less airport and high temperature hassle than film! Will post results in a month or so with a short report. Many thanks for the regulars here and at getdpi/sony for some great information these past 6-9 months.
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