fredmiranda.com
Login

Moderated by: Fred Miranda
  New fredmiranda.com Mobile Site
  New Feature: SMS Notification alert
  New Feature: Buy & Sell Watchlist
  

FM Forums | Fuji Forum | Join Upload & Sell

1       2       3              25              27              124       125       end
  

Archive 2017 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX

  
 
Makten
Offline
• • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #1 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


buggz wrote:
Here is a useful tool:

Image Circle Visualizer

https://www.dtcommercialphoto.com/support/lens-visualizer-tools/


Nice! I just noticed that you can drag the sensor area around within the image circle to check how much shift you can get.
Been thinking of a Cambo Actus to use with P67 lenses, but it's really expensive.



Jan 24, 2020 at 05:56 AM
jcolwell
Offline
• • • • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #2 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


buggz wrote:
Here is a useful tool:

Image Circle Visualizer

https://www.dtcommercialphoto.com/support/lens-visualizer-tools/


Very groovy. Thanks for the link.

Interesting to compare the IC diameters for TS-E 17/4L and TS-E 24/3.5L II, relative to the 35mm sensor size. Also, interesting to see the relative size of the iPhone 6 sensor. Magnification (or lack of) rules !

It would be nice to see some older M645 and P645 lenses here.



Jan 24, 2020 at 06:26 AM
rdeloe
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #3 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


That is a neat tool. Thanks for the link.

I've been doing it the hard way, with circles and rectangles in a PowerPoint file I made. This helps me figure out how much movement I might be able to get. Windows being Windows, you have to set your system-level measurement unit to metric in order to have metric in PowerPoint! It's worth it for this purpose because it lets me easily define the sizes of image circles and sensor areas.

Complicating factors are that the usable image circle changes in size based on focus distance and aperture. And on my P645 45-85mm lens, it changes with zoom setting. At 45mm the image circle is very tight (just big enough to cover 645 film); that still allows useful movements on GFX sensors of up to 10mm. Interestingly, the image circle is huge in the middle of the zoom range. At the 60mm position, I can shift 20mm easily. It gets smaller again towards the 85mm end, but is still larger than at 45mm.

buggz wrote:
Here is a useful tool:

Image Circle Visualizer

https://www.dtcommercialphoto.com/support/lens-visualizer-tools/





Jan 24, 2020 at 07:58 AM
beardedspoooon
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #4 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Sigma 135/1.8 via Kipon, edited to taste.







Jan 28, 2020 at 06:56 PM
Makten
Offline
• • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #5 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


A few images with the Nikkor 50/2. The first one is at f/5.6 and the two following are wide open.
They obviously don't have the exact same aspect ratio, so I've probably cropped a millimeter or two somewhere, but they are virtually using the full 33x44 mm sensor.
You can see the heavy curvature of field in the first image, which actually is worse than when shooting at f/2.8. Wide open the vignetting is a bit heavy for my liking, unless you get fairly close. At 6:7 the lens is mostly usable at any aperture and distance.



District heating leak by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



9755 by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



3757 by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



Feb 23, 2020 at 04:33 AM
TimFoster
Offline

Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #6 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX



I've owned the GFX 50S for about six months now. Here's my experience with the Samyang/Rokinon line. Mine are mostly cine versions in Nikon mount:

24mm F/1.4 or T/1.5: exhibits vignetting.

24mm F/3.5 tilt-shift: no vignetting without movements but soft until about F/11.

35mm F/1.4 or T/1.5: slight vignetting but usable.

50mm F/1.4 or T/1.5: very slight vignetting but quite usable. Moderate CA.

85mm F/1.4 or T/1.5: very slight vignetting at infinity. A lot of CA until F/2.8.

135mm F/2.0 or T/2.2: amazing on this camera. Very sharp wide open, no vignetting, and no discernible CA. Worth buying for this camera alone.

I use the Fuji 63mm, the Mitakon 65mm F/1.4, and the Samyang 135mm T/2.2 for almost everything. When the Fuji 30mm is released I'll buy that as well.

I can't post examples here but DM me if you want to see some.



Feb 24, 2020 at 05:36 PM
helimat
Offline
• • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #7 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


dgurtch wrote:
Ideally the new Fuji 50mm f3.5 would fill the bill, but it is $1,000.


The 50/3.5 is on sale for $499 right now, and from what I understand will be through until the end of the month.

GF 50mm f/3.5 R LM WR @ B&H



Mar 03, 2020 at 11:24 AM
marshield
Offline

Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #8 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Regarding Mamiya 120 Macro there are 2 versions. I wonder how big a difference it is between the 2 versions. The Digital optimized version is 3 times more expensive than the older version. Can someone share share some photos? thanks


Mar 08, 2020 at 09:19 PM
mjm6
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #9 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


I think the second one has an electronic aperture, so check before you buy (unless you want to deal with the hassle of either shooting wide open, or bringing a Mamiya camera to change the aperture).

I actually think there were three versions... One MF, physical aperture, one MF, electronic aperture, and one AF, electronic aperture. Plus, I guess a fourth with a leaf shutter.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamiya_645




Mar 08, 2020 at 09:47 PM
Olaf G
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #10 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


The C/Y Sonnar 100mm f3.5 might be a good candidate…
I don't have a Fuji GFX, but rear shift stitching on a Sony A7RM2 with a EOS to Sony-E shift adapter (which gives me approx. 42mm x 36mm sensor size) works very well...



Mar 20, 2020 at 06:33 AM
Steve Spencer
Online
• • • • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #11 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Olaf G wrote:
The C/Y Sonnar 100mm f3.5 might be a good candidate…
I don't have a Fuji GFX, but rear shift stitching on a Sony A7RM2 with a EOS to Sony-E shift adapter (which gives me approx. 42mm x 36mm sensor size) works very well...


Although the C/Y 100 f/3.5 Sonnar is a great lens, I would actually recommend the Hasselblad V mount 100 f/3.5 which is a wonderful lens (and fairly small) and of course covers the image circle with a lot of room to spare. It isn't an expensive lens and a great performer. Even the adapter isn't too expensive. Both lenses are made by Zeiss and bare a family resemblance.



Mar 20, 2020 at 08:40 AM
Olaf G
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #12 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Steve Spencer wrote:
Although the C/Y 100 f/3.5 Sonnar is a great lens, I would actually recommend the Hasselblad V mount 100 f/3.5 which is a wonderful lens (and fairly small) and of course covers the image circle with a lot of room to spare. It isn't an expensive lens and a great performer. Even the adapter isn't too expensive. Both lenses are made by Zeiss and bare a family resemblance.


The Mamiya 645 Sekor 110mm f2.8 is a formidable performer as well. Small and light, with an usable image circle that is bigger than one would expect from a 645 lens.

These are with two combined shift adapters at a equivalent sensor size of approx. 72mm x 40.5mm...

Monte Rosa by Olaf Gnau, auf Flickr

Old leaves by Olaf Gnau, auf Flickr



Mar 20, 2020 at 08:57 AM
mb126
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #13 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Any experience with the Rokinon 20mm f/1.8? I am interested in this lens as an ultrawide/astro option primarily. I'm fairly happy with the performance on FF and hoping it will hold up on most of the mini-MF sensor too.

Thanks!



Apr 07, 2020 at 01:49 PM
esanchez
Online
• • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #14 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


I use the same setup and LOVE IT.

beardedspoooon wrote:
Sigma 135/1.8 via Kipon, edited to taste.





Apr 07, 2020 at 02:49 PM
buggz
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #15 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Anyone try a Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM II ?
I'd like to know how it performs, and with the Canon 1.4 TC III.



Apr 08, 2020 at 10:25 AM
Makten
Offline
• • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #16 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Mamiya 80/1.9, soft wide open but in a nice way. Funky bokeh that gets pleasing and uniform already at f/2.8. I haven't tried the 80/2.8 but I would guess the f/1.9 beats it at f/2.8. The worst drawbacks with this lens is the LoCA and 6-bladed aperture (though somewhat rounded).

First two are wide open, the third is at f/16 and the last one at f/2.8.


9543 by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



2473 by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



9413 by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



1171 by Martin Hertsius, on Flickr



Apr 12, 2020 at 06:49 AM
Olaf G
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #17 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Makten wrote:
Mamiya 80/1.9, soft wide open but in a nice way. Funky bokeh that gets pleasing and uniform already at f/2.8. I haven't tried the 80/2.8 but I would guess the f/1.9 beats it at f/2.8. The worst drawbacks with this lens is the LoCA and 6-bladed aperture (though somewhat rounded).

First two are wide open, the third is at f/16 and the last one at f/2.8.


Stunning pictures, love the first one (Renault 17?).

IMHO the biggest drawback of this lens is its curvature of field which makes it difficult to use it as a landscape lens.



Apr 12, 2020 at 02:33 PM
Makten
Offline
• • • • •
Upload & Sell: On
p.26 #18 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


Olaf G wrote:
Stunning pictures, love the first one (Renault 17?).

IMHO the biggest drawback of this lens is its curvature of field which makes it difficult to use it as a landscape lens.


Thanks, and yes, it's a Renault. I haven't seen any curvature of field though. I thought it was flatter than most lenses.
The exit pupil is really far from the sensor, like 10-12 cm, so the filter stack shouldn't be involved in any FC at least.



Apr 13, 2020 at 03:12 AM
rdeloe
Offline
• • • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #19 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


If you need a 28mm lens that can shift on a GFX 50R/S camera, the Nikon PC-Nikkor 28mm f/3.5 is worth a look.

I'm pleasantly surprised by how well this lens does on a GFX sensor. It covers the sensor with room to spare. Shifts of 5mm are reliably good, and larger shifts are possible depending on the scenario. It's decently sharp and the colours are lovely. Its only weaknesses is it's crap (or my copy is anyway) on flat subjects at the minimum focus distance of 30 cm. By 1 metre it's fine. Don't buy it to make copies of your paintings. But for many other types of photography it's a good choice if you need 28mm with some movements.

I posted a detailed review over here: https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/4482425



Apr 18, 2020 at 09:23 AM
DougDolde
Offline
• • •
Upload & Sell: Off
p.26 #20 · Adapting Lenses to the Fuji GFX


I plan to buy the Fringe Contax 645 to GF adapter then a few Contax 645 lenses like the 120mm, 140mm, the 1.4x Mutar, maybe others. The adapter isn't cheap but the lenses are and they are very good for the most part.

When I had a Contax 645 I found the 45-90mm to be sharper at 45mm than the prime

Edited on May 19, 2020 at 08:33 PM · View previous versions



May 19, 2020 at 05:52 PM
1       2       3              25              27              124       125       end




FM Forums | Fuji Forum | Join Upload & Sell

1       2       3              25              27              124       125       end
    
 

Welcome back
Log in to your account