In portraiture getting the human facial features the right size scale and proportion to each other is very important and using either a too short or too long focal length lens will distort that relationship and make the nose too big with a wide angle or standard lens used too close, or the face too flat with a too long telephoto one, generally in 35mm photography the ideal portrait focal length is around 85/90/100 and in medium format around 150/180.
I find with the Mamiya C lenses for portraiture I prefer using the 135mm lenses indoors where space is restricted and the 180mm outdoors.
http://mcpactions.com/2010/07/21/the-ideal-focal-length-for-portraiture-a-photographers-experiment/
Any lens of any focal length will give you huge nose and tiny ears two feet from a person s face. Stay far enough, crop if necessary as every lens (fish-eyes excluded) produces the sake rectilinear central perspective.
(focussing at 2 inch, handheld, testing parallax)
(as close as 1 inch, handheld, testing parallax)
I'm curious. I've not yet attempted any close-ups with my C330S. Do you find the little parallax bar in the viewfinder to be accurate? Or were you using a paramender?
Ken
Looks like a lot of fun!
I'm curious. I've not yet attempted any close-ups with my C330S. Do you find the little parallax bar in the viewfinder to be accurate? Or were you using a paramender?
Ken
It isn't accurate with the wide angle lenses which are the best lenses to shoot close ups with, there is a engraved transparent parallax correction plate for the 55 and 65mm lenses that fits under the focusing hood to give the correct exposure increases for the bellows extension at close distances http://www.ebay.com/itm/Mamiya-Para...CLOSE-FOCUS-AIDE-EXPOSURE-GUIDE-/231289223620. you can get 1:1 life-size images with the 55mm lensesI'm curious. I've not yet attempted any close-ups with my C330S. Do you find the little parallax bar in the viewfinder to be accurate? Or were you using a paramender?
Ken
It isn't accurate with the wide angle lenses which are the best lenses to shoot close ups with, there is a engraved transparent parallax correction plate for the 55 and 65mm lenses that fits under the focusing hood to give the correct exposure increases for the bellows extension at close distances http://www.ebay.com/itm/Mamiya-Para...CLOSE-FOCUS-AIDE-EXPOSURE-GUIDE-/231289223620. you can get 1:1 life-size images with the 55mm lenses
On the C33 the lens selector dial for the parallax correction doesn't go below 80 mm. Does the C330 use such a dial?
Fomapan 100 (in Ilford DD-X):
(sun from the left)
(almost straight into the sun, no lens hood)
(sun in my back)
Hah, got you there! I already bought a Mamiya RB67 with three lenses ...
ONLY three lenses?
There are the wonderful 50mm, 65mm, 90mm, 127mm, 180mm, and 250mm lenses for a "starter" kit. So if you have three lenses, you MUST BUY three (3) more lenses.
Not only that, señor, for the RB67 there is also the wonderful 140/4.5 C Macro.
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