Wow, amazing shots. Love the tone and compositions. davidflem wrote:
I was walking through the Stonehouse peninsula in Plymouth on my way to get some waterside shots and saw these on the way. Stonehouse was formerly a separate town between Plymouth and Devonport and emerged in the early 19th century as the Royal William victualling yard and Royal Marine barracks were constructed.
k-h.a.w wrote:
Thanks Manuel. Great image and IQ.
I own multiple different lenses for a number of focal lengths.
It can be quite interesting using one or the other for the same focal length.
Have you considered keeping your 35 mm and simply adding another 35 mm lens?
You can always sell one later, no?
Cheers, Karl-Heinz.
Thank you Karl-Heinz. I'm totally agree with you... the (my) only problem is the budget... I'm a "poor" Italian man BTW, it is rather difficult sell lenses in this period, at least here in my area, so I will have time to decide.
Went down to The Great Smokey Mountains National Park with friends over Memorial Day. Photography wasn't the reason for the trip at all, but still managed to sneak a mini tripod and a few filters in the backpack. A7r3, Tammy 28-75.
I just got the CV 21/3.5 - very nice little lens. Seeing a pretty good amount of CA in backlit situations but I think that was expected. And I can fix that up, unlike the corner smearing from the Leica 21/3.4 it replaces. All on the A7R2.
CV 40/1.2:
And finally some wildlife with the CV 180/4 (cropped):
Looking at a cascade (I believe on the Rose River) downstream of Dark Hollow Falls.
Tripod mounted A7r and Leica R 28mm f2.8 Elmarit V2 lens.
ISO 50, f22?, 3.2 second.
Exposure Corrected -0.78 Stops.
June 8, 2015
At a cascade down stream of Dark Hollow Falls (I believe on Rose River), Shenandoah National Park, Virginia.