Pieter12
Member
If it was shot with an SWC, then it is a 38mm Biogon.
Rules, schmules. Any lens, any depth of focus. Usually I like it when the eyes are in focus, nothing else really matters.As you can see in the examples the recipe for distortion-free portraiture is in the distance to the subject not in the lens used. Rule of thumb says, you need to have ten times the the depth of your subject for a natural looking reproduction. For a portrait that is the 15 cm or 6" ear to nosetip multiplied by ten. The fl of your lens then determines the size of the subject on the negative.
Remember...Mamiya c330 et al
.
They make a great prop for self-portraits.
Pre-focused Mamiya 645 Pro, using the self timer.
View attachment 410391
I used that C330 to shoot weddings, including lots of portraits. That 135mm lens was great for the portrait work, but the 80mm was also great for more environmental portraiture.
You learn how to focus as you get used to using them for that purpose.
Nice to learn about your personal preferences to ignore the topic and there may be good artistical reasons to do so and there are enough examples where this choice has been made. Can you elaborate on your reasoning?Rules, schmules. Any lens, any depth of focus. Usually I like it when the eyes are in focus, nothing else really matters.
What reasoning ? Where did I ignore topic ?Nice to learn about your personal preferences to ignore the topic and there may be good artistical reasons to do so and there are enough examples where this choice has been made. Can you elaborate on your reasoning?
In fact you can! All you have to do is crop the subject to the same framing which isn't done to not waste any real estate with respect to the size of your film or sensor. This has been discussed many times before.So you are saying you can do same portraiture with ANY lens? Which is of course impossible.
Fine, in this case I can't see any disagreement of what we are trying to say.I don't considering cropping as an alternative in true sense of what I am saying here.
You didn't. I wasn't responding to a comment of yours.What reasoning ? Where did I ignore topic ?
OP has Rolleiflex 3.5F
In some pictures I made, if found it hard to focus, and some portraits are slightly out of focus, maybe due to too open aperture, but don't know for sure.
All very interesting. But getting back to the Tele-Rollei, it seems that a 135mm lens might be preferable for portraits. Pros and cons?
....some portraits are slightly out of focus, maybe due to too open aperture, but don't know for sure.
Fine, in this case I can't see any disagreement of what we are trying to say.
I was responding to what you have written. I am sure, I know what OP has and it is also a perfect combo for portraits.
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