Paul, the first one has very nice composition. Great one!
Jack, That is a beautiful showcase of what 28 can do. Really like the color and composition of the shot.
Picture This! wrote:
i concur. The first two are just great zhangyue
IMO the second one takes the cake. The first one shows whole tables and chairs at the border of the frame, but the second one gives the impression that these tables and chairs extend much further than the frame, and I love that look.
I recently got the leica elmarit-R 60 macro. What a pain it was to leitax ! The hardest of the 3 i've converted. But the results from the 60 make me smile. What a sharp lens this is !
Im considering picking up a copy but Im less sold on its mid distance to infinity gestalt, even if macro shots with it look really good. It's been tough to find images though.
Im considering picking up a copy but Im less sold on its mid distance to infinity gestalt, even if macro shots with it look really good. It's been tough to find images though.
Two middle distance woodland images made with the 60/2.8, it is a fine lens and I'd doubt you'd regret purchasing it
Manu, further to our discussion here are few test shots taken just before and at dusk using OVF and green dot focus confirmation on D800E. I did use tripod to prevent camera shake at speeds slower than 1/60.
I tried the method you suggested and the results between LV critical focus and green dot are consistent. There is a bit of play when using the green dot which is only a consideration for close range and macro type shots where dof is very shallow. For normal shooting I'm now fine with the green after trying the procedure you suggested.
Im considering picking up a copy but Im less sold on its mid distance to infinity gestalt, even if macro shots with it look really good. It's been tough to find images though.
I have posted this before, but since you asked:
By the way, these are berries, not apples or tomatoes. Even in the size presented the berries are much larger than life size. I have a metal print of this image printed to 15" 20". Image shot on tripod mounted Lumix G1 camera.