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Thread: portrait lens for 4X5

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Sep 1998
    Posts
    114

    portrait lens for 4X5

    what would some of you suggest as a portrait lens for 4X5? although i'd like hea r the details about focal lengths, i'm also interested in particular makes or sp ecific lenses. i have a Speed Graphic, so barrel lens are not out of the questio n. do you use the same focal length for the body shot as well as the head shot? are portraits shot a wider opennings better? any and all comments on this subjec t are welcome. thank you.

  2. #2

    portrait lens for 4X5

    Style is a personal thing, OR is dictated by the use of the portrait, if it's commissioned work. Arnold Newman uses short lenses - including real WA's - and includes some environment. Karsh varied between long and short until he went to color in the 70's, then it was all short. Short lenses keep nearly everything sharp, right? Long lenses, when used for a head & shoulders or a head-only [if focused on the eyes] is "soft" by the time it gets back to the ears. This gives a more rounded effect, called modeling, and adds dimensionality or a more 3-D effect. When I make personal portraits, I use 8x10. I have a favorite lens. It's a 1950's Kodak Portrait, 305mm. What's fun about this lens [and I'll bet the Rodenstock Imagon will do the same thing] is that it's very soft, until you get down to f/8. I find a full-frame, head and shoulders for a middle-aged male, works nicely at f/8. It's just a little flattering, but isn't "movie star fuzzy". At f/16, this lens is really sharp, and at f/32, I can't tell the results from a Commercial Ektar. I know this doesn't really apply to your Speed Graphic, but I wanted to suggest that there are several factors to consider, with style not the least of them. Specifically, I have used a barrel lens on the Speed Graphic, using the focal plane shutter. While the results were fine, the slap of of the focal plane shutter was very disconserting to the subject. The lens was a 15" Wollensak telephoto - lots are around on EBay - and again, we're talking full-frame head & shoulders, but with the lens fairly open to get those ears soft (!). A suggestion: shoot a young person, up close and personal, with any lens on your Speed Graphic. Fill the frame with the head only. Watch how the ears go out and how you get that nice roundness when you focus on their eyes. No need to flatter 'em, 'cuz they don't have wrinkles!

  3. #3

    Join Date
    May 1998
    Posts
    218

    portrait lens for 4X5

    As Dick says, it is a highly personal decision, and depends (for example) on how much of the person you want to include, and the distance you want to be from the subject. For 5x4 format, something around 150mm would be conventional. I'm a wide-angle freak, and love the results from 47mm (Schneider Super Angulon 47 XL). Some results (not all 'portraits') are here. I don't know if that lens would fit on your camera.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Dec 1998
    Posts
    405

    portrait lens for 4X5

    Coming from a lousy portraitist, namely me, I would agree with the others. Find your style, then pick a lens. If you don't know your style, there's nothing wrong in sticking to the old "2X normal" rule, that is 300mm or so for 4x5. I have a pretty neat Wollensak 300mm Velostigmat variable focus, which works well as an all-around lens, especially for portraits of the head/head and shoulders variety. The front element is designed so that the distance between the two lenses can be varied by turning front of the lens. A setting of "0" is sharpest and would work well for photographing children with pure, unblemished skin, while a setting of "5" would be best for a subject in need of some diffusion, like a prune or an old woman. The added benefit of this lens is that it is fast; it opens up to f/4.5. But being fast means that it is fat and heavy (mounted in a #5 Alphax) and would not work on a Graphic. There must be other lenses of this type out there.

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Mar 1998
    Posts
    1,972

    portrait lens for 4X5

    I think that,generally speaking that one of the more important aspects of photog raphic portraiture is the subject to camera distance. This has a lot to do with the psychology of the session itself and also with the sense of the sitter as ex perienced by the viewer. I then select my lens based on cropping and composition al considerations. So my choice goes from 150mm>210mm>300mm with occasional use of a 90mm or (rarely) a 65mm. (on 4x5 of course)

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