When you write « Biotar », you mean the Zeiss lens or the Helios 44-2?
The Zeiss Biotar.
When you write « Biotar », you mean the Zeiss lens or the Helios 44-2?
So, with which lens did you notice a lack of contrast compared to you Canon lens? The Biotar, the Helios or both?
.Ok friends. Sunny day yesterday in Berlin, I shot a whole roll in stopped down mode. so:
Canon ae1 + zeiss Biotar
1. wide open, I focus. 2. I stop down to the desired aperture. 3. I set the shutter speed till the needle points the stopped down metering mark. 4. shot.
Now, before I show you the negative of the roll I yesterday shot this way, I want to show you first the negatives of the photos I posted at the beginning of this thread, the ones that showed me the difference in contrast (or exposure...) between my Canon fd lens and the Biotar.
Here is the Canon FD in a sunny day.
View attachment 296940
Here is the same day the Biotar, shot in the wrong mode! In the left upper corner you still can see some shot from the Canon. The difference is noticable, still note sure if that is a difference of contrast or exposure.
View attachment 296941
Finally, here are the negatives of the shot taken yesterday with the Zeiss stopped down metering:
View attachment 296939
what I think is that the photos are well exposed, the negatives are not light neither are they too dark. I think they only lack contrast! May the negative be underdeveloped? I don't think so, the numbers of the film look very dark and black.
So I am happy to see that the problem of the underexposure is solved and that the stopped down metering is effective, but still, something is wrong! I can see from the scans that this lens is good performer in details, but the dynamic range of this negative is very short. I got no whites I got no blacks.
Thoughts?
Both, but let's just talk of the Biotar, the Helios has almost nothing to do with this story. As the title of the thread says, we are talkig about the Zeiss Biotar.
Both, but let's just talk of the Biotar, the Helios has almost nothing to do with this story. As the title of the thread says, we are talkig about the Zeiss Biotar.
OK but right from the start you throw the Helios in the conversation which is IMO pretty confusing.
I think I struggled so much so far, despite the huge amount of information I recieved, because I had a missing piece of the puzzle that apparently is given for granted by all of you.
The problem with any forum is often because of the huge amount of information received rather than despite the huge amount of information. I have no idea how we can change this but it is often a problem. Sometimes you can drown under the weight of the wave of information that hits you. A forum can take a few days to solve a problem that a person with face to face contact with you would have solved in 5 minutes or less
Glad it is almost all fine now in terms of the stopped down metering but yes it can be frustrating
pentaxuser
I think you have unrealistic expectations of this lens.
I think Paul sums this up quite well. Time to experiment and find how this lens will work for you.I think you have unrealistic expectations of this lens. Comparing lens technologies like the Biotar, with more current lenses is apples-to-oranges. They are not going to have the same contrast. All lenses have their own contrast characteristics. You just adjust your post processing to compensate for specific lens traits. You cannot expect the images straight out of the scanner to look the same as any other camera/lens result.
If you are not adjusting the scanning parameters to account for contrast and density of the specific negative, then you aren't completing the job. And yes, it appears your original negatives are underexposed, and your second set are also on the thin side. Not every lens performs exactly the same as any other lens. You have to learn how to get the best out of each lens, and understand its limitations.
Your terms are confusing.
Let me say it this way:
There are two red marks. A static one, at the filtering, the other one, on the ring actually operating the aperture.
Turn the preset-ring, with the aperture values, so that the intended value is at the static mark.
Twist the aperture-operating ring to the left until its arrrest for fully open, or to the right, to indeed f2, for fully closed.
Yes, the design of this lens is confusing, or rather the red mark on the aperture-operating ring. It leads to reading the respective aperture figure, which yields a complete nonsense value reading.
Seemingly the red dot on this ring is meant to give an orientation as to at which arrest this operating ring is set.
My advise:
-) black-out this red mark
-) set a label "closed", maybe with an arrow pointing right, to the right of the DOF -scale
Then you would know that twisting this ring to its right side arrest is having the aperture closed to its preset vaue. Twisting to the left, to its other arrest, then of course would mean the aperture being fully open. By now lacking of that red mark you no longer may make erroneous readings of the operated aperture value.
However, then you may have to feel (I got a sample at hand with zero friction at this ring), at what position it actually is, before exposing. Whereas just looking at that red mark and seeing it at f2 would confirm the right position for exposure. But typically one got ones fingers at the barrel before exposing anyway and thus may feel for that arrest before releasing.
I think you missed my post:I posted the images of the negative before and after the stopped down metering asking opinions about the differences and I got no answers about it. I think they are well exposed now, before they defenetely were underexposed, but still I think they lack contrast,
You switched films - Tri-X to Kentmere 400 - and the new film was developed to give what appears to be lower contrast. If the development were to change in order to match the contrast of Tri-X exposed using the Canon lenses, then the results would be similar.Correct me if I'm wrong, but it looks to me like the Canon lens photos were shot on Kodak Tri-X, while Zeiss Biotar lens photos using stop down metering were shot on Kentmere 400.
Different films will often give different contrast, unless development is adjusted to match the contrast.
I think they are well exposed now, before they defenetely were underexposed, but still I think they lack contrast,
To be honest I have no idea what you are talking about in this message and why you are telling me this instructions.
I think this thread went drammatically off topic and I can't control it anymore.
Ok friends. Sunny day yesterday in Berlin, I shot a whole roll in stopped down mode. so:
Canon ae1 + zeiss Biotar
1. wide open, I focus. 2. I stop down to the desired aperture. 3. I set the shutter speed till the needle points the stopped down metering mark. 4. shot.
Now, before I show you the negative of the roll I yesterday shot this way, I want to show you first the negatives of the photos I posted at the beginning of this thread, the ones that showed me the difference in contrast (or exposure...) between my Canon fd lens and the Biotar.
Here is the Canon FD in a sunny day.
View attachment 296940
Here is the same day the Biotar, shot in the wrong mode! In the left upper corner you still can see some shot from the Canon. The difference is noticable, still note sure if that is a difference of contrast or exposure.
View attachment 296941
Finally, here are the negatives of the shot taken yesterday with the Zeiss stopped down metering:
View attachment 296939
what I think is that the photos are well exposed, the negatives are not light neither are they too dark. I think they only lack contrast! May the negative be underdeveloped? I don't think so, the numbers of the film look very dark and black.
So I am happy to see that the problem of the underexposure is solved and that the stopped down metering is effective, but still, something is wrong! I can see from the scans that this lens is good performer in details, but the dynamic range of this negative is very short. I got no whites I got no blacks.
Thoughts?
I think you missed my post:
You switched films - Tri-X to Kentmere 400 - and the new film was developed to give what appears to be lower contrast. If the development were to change in order to match the contrast of Tri-X exposed using the Canon lenses, then the results would be similar.
You will probably find that if you use the FD lens with the Kentmere film, and develop the film the same way as the Kentmere negatives you showed us, then those negatives will also be lower in contrast.
That being said, I'd be willing to bet that the Kentmere 400 negatives will be quite usable. To my mind, they actually look more easy to print than the Tri-X negatives exposed with the Canon FD lens.
I think you missed my post:
You switched films - Tri-X to Kentmere 400 - and the new film was developed to give what appears to be lower contrast. If the development were to change in order to match the contrast of Tri-X exposed using the Canon lenses, then the results would be similar.
You will probably find that if you use the FD lens with the Kentmere film, and develop the film the same way as the Kentmere negatives you showed us, then those negatives will also be lower in contrast.
That being said, I'd be willing to bet that the Kentmere 400 negatives will be quite usable. To my mind, they actually look more easy to print than the Tri-X negatives exposed with the Canon FD lens.
I don't know if this is a lens, exposure, or development problem.
In this context today another member came up with another issue that might be related to your problem: the confusing operation of the aperture of the Helios lens. As I considered his remark ambiguous I tried to explain the issue in depth and gave an advice to solve it. I gave this that to that member, to you, but also to anyone else.
You and me seem to have completely different ideas on what a forum is for. To me it is not a for free, private counselling to solve ones problems, but a place to discuss issues, being ones own or not, to mutual benefit.
You got a really great amount of attention to your own problem. But you do not own this thread. No one does.
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