I believe you need a shorter focal length lens, not a longer lens.
I use a Durst slide copier with bellows and a Fujifilm XT-2 (APS-C). For a 35mm camera, a 50mm lens would likely work for 35mm slides. I use a 75mm enlarging lens and am able to digitize 35mm and 6x6 negs (barely) with it. For 6x6 a 90mm might be a little better but the 75mm works. A 50mm lens focuses too close and does not work.
If one wants to end up with a digital image, one should start a digital camera; if one starts with an analog camera and film, the output should remain analog as well.Hi!
I just received a novoflex autobellows that came with a vivitar vhe 50mm enlarging lens that I intend to use for film scanning, since am using a canon 60d I already new that it might not work with the specific lens. But since the adapter I am using for the camera on the bellows don't allow to focus on infinity or just really short range focusing I am wondering if it might play a role here. In the end I just would like to know in your opinion if it's worth getting a 75mm enlarging lens or it is better just to return everything and use the 60d on a tripod with my leica elmarit R 60mm macro on it (with which I can´t fill the hole sensor with the negative).
If one wants to end up with a digital image, one should start a digital camera; if one starts with an analog camera and film, the output should remain analog as well.
Thanks Dan for the numbers - they are really helpful.Ralphie, I digitize my old slides so that I can use the images in ppt presentations and in publications. Re-shooting the subjects with digital is impossible. Really!
OP, you want to fill an APS-C sensor with the image of a 35 mm negative or slide. Required magnification is ~ 0.62 = 1.6:1. Doing this requires a lens' diaphragm-to-chip distance of ~ 1.6 * focal length and a diaphragm-to-negative/slide distance of ~ 2.67 * focal length.
I don't know your bellows minimum extension, including bellows-to-camera adapter. Your camera's flange to film distance is 18 mm. I don't know how you're going to hold the negative or slide in front of the lens.
Do the arithmetic and you'll what will work for you.
The focal length issue is the same for regular lenses and enlarging lenses.
The issue relates to the nature of your slide copier. My Olympus slide copier accessory needs a shorter lens, because the slide holding part can't be moved far enough away from the lens to give full frame coverage of a 35mm slide on to a smaller sensor when using a 50mm lens - enlarging or macro. In my case - M 4/3 - I need a 25mm macro or enlarging lens.
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