Zone Focusing: I continue to improve my "A-Game" for using manually focused lens. Channeling my best Cartier-Bresson, I am trying to capture that Decisive Moment, and coincidentally, trying to reduce the time required to focus my ersatz Leica, a.k.a. my Fuji X-E1. Fuji's own lenses lack distance and depth-of-field scales, and while the autofocus function works well, the camera must be pointing at your subject long enough for the camera to lock on target. To be true to the moment, the camera-subject distance should be set before the camera floats towards the photographer eye, capturing the photo in a single fluid motion. Or so in my dreams.
Original image can be seen here. |
When I first saw it, I was enchanted. I could easily obtain an adapter so that it would work on any of my X bodies. The only thing that stopped me was the focal length. At 25mm, it effectively becomes a 38mm lens, a useful length, but long enough to warrant more precise framing when in actual use. Unfortunately, I do already own a 17mm lens, a TT Artisans F 1.4, which would provide a similar outlook as the 25mm on a full-framed body, but it has neither to compact size, nor the cachet, of so novel a lens as the Snapshot. It goes without saying that the Skopar did have both a distance scale and a depth of field scale, as would any lens without rangefinder coupling. Alas, a more modern iteration of this novel lens concept shall have to do. For the moment, the best contender is the Laowa 10mm.
Vanishing Distance Scale: In my last post, I installed a Cat Labs Rubber Focusing Tab on my 10mm F 4.0 Laowa lens. It has improved my ability to focus in the cramped control environment of this pancake lens, and decreased the occurrences of finger photobombing. Unfortunately, the Focusing Tab completely covered the distance scale. To make matters worse, the infinity stop doesn't wasn't properly set, which is to say that it is capable of focusing the lens past infinity. When focusing through the electronic view finder (EVF), I made it a practice to rotating the focusing until it stopped, and backpedaled a bit to bring the lens back to the right side of infinity. It's easy enough to remember, right up to the moment when you forget.
In use, I would set the lens to F 8.0 and align the gold dot with the Focusing Index (right photo, down arrow), and know that everything from 0.3 meters to infinity will be in reasonable focus. This zone focusing technique is reserved for those times when there isn't time to properly focus, or if one just wants to capture images "in the moment".
No comments:
Post a Comment