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marcwilson Registered: Mar 21, 2006 Total Posts: 1579 Country: United Kingdom |
Hi guys, |
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mawz Registered: Sep 11, 2005 Total Posts: 4633 Country: Canada |
Sounds like you want something like this: |
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Emcam Registered: Apr 21, 2004 Total Posts: 389 Country: Canada |
My friend has a 4x5 camera with a moving DSLR adaptor back on it. He can pace the camera anywhere across the 4x5 "film" plane or make many/many images that are easily stitiched together. it is much the same idea as the last post, but he made it himself. |
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marcwilson Registered: Mar 21, 2006 Total Posts: 1579 Country: United Kingdom |
cambo make cameras that allow the use of some large format lenses with dslr's but being bellows based the usable lenses are very limited..i.e. 28mm but then 72mm and upwards... |
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Francisco Tan Registered: Aug 06, 2002 Total Posts: 480 Country: United States |
Maybe this one cheaper: http://homepage2.nifty.com/akiyanroom/redbook-e/collection/blue.html |
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marcwilson Registered: Mar 21, 2006 Total Posts: 1579 Country: United Kingdom |
yes novoflex make the same but again its for 80mm large format lens. |
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shirozina Registered: May 22, 2006 Total Posts: 1655 Country: United Kingdom |
If you have to stitch - why not just use a good prime, a pano head and software? |
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Drew_Persson Registered: Oct 25, 2006 Total Posts: 1193 Country: United States |
Cambo Ultima 35. The downside is the foundation rig runs about $2K used on eBay, and accessories cost a small fortune. And you won't have any luck stitching images with LF lenses shorter than 135mm due to mirror box shadowing, and you can't really go shorter than 90mm due to body-lens interference. |
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marcwilson Registered: Mar 21, 2006 Total Posts: 1579 Country: United Kingdom |
This is all just wondering anyway but...perhaps my initial post was not clear enough. |
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shirozina Registered: May 22, 2006 Total Posts: 1655 Country: United Kingdom |
I think what you, I and the rest of the architectural photography community need is an updated 24mm TS-E from Canon or an adapter to use the new Nikon 24mm. There are plenty of good 35mm shift lenses out there and Canon's 45mm TS-E is very good by all accounts so thay range is covered IMO. Once you go longer than 50mm I find that the vertical lines do not converge very much whin you move the lens axis away from horizontal and it's easier to just correct any small convergence of verticals in software. |
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Ed Sawyer Registered: May 08, 2007 Total Posts: 1977 Country: United States |
The Oly 24/3.5 Shift is a good alternative, and better than the Canon TS-E. |
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marcwilson Registered: Mar 21, 2006 Total Posts: 1579 Country: United Kingdom |
I know, I know...the 35mm shift lens options, and zoerk and mirex etc are well known and there are many great threads about them...I'm wondering about body options using large format lenses... |
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brianc1959 Registered: Feb 24, 2007 Total Posts: 44 Country: N/A |
DSLR that accepts LF lenses and allows shifting/tilting: |