My hometown beach...
http://i277.photobucket.com/albums/k.../LF2011-14.jpg
Chamonix 45N-2 + Sinaron 90mm, HP5+ EI200
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My hometown beach...
http://i277.photobucket.com/albums/k.../LF2011-14.jpg
Chamonix 45N-2 + Sinaron 90mm, HP5+ EI200
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5212/...95ba370b_z.jpg
Sol Duc Falls, Olympic National Park, 2009 (finally scanned yesterday, V750)
Tachihara 4x5, Caltar II-N 150mm f/5.6, Kodak TMAX100
As usual, I caught up on all of the great posts since I last checked in only to be overwhelmed at the quality. I'm not bringing anything particularly new or even competent to the table here... sigh.
Yes you are..not only is it very nice, it's different than 99.8% of the other shots of these falls in that, a) you didn't clone out the tree, b) it isn't a triple-image stitched, DRI, tone-mapped vertorama.
Well I suppose that IS true (thanks, you actually made me feel better about it) :)
No good photos with the 4x5 yet. But I do have a question. Is my 135mm f4.7 xenar lens soft around the edges? Noticed this in several shots. Searching leads me to believe that it is.
http://img138.imageshack.us/img138/5867/img008px.jpg
What aperture were you shooting at?
I have one of those. It's not so bad stopped down. The best that can be said for it wide open is that it's really easy to focus and compose.
All shots were f16 or smaller. I think that one was at f16. Wanted to stop the snow so didn't go smaller. Same thing with this one although less apparent. I think the top left corner is soft:
http://img340.imageshack.us/img340/6452/img007es.jpg
You are right, it is easy to focus.
Xenar = Tessar. Known for only moderate coverage.
There's a reason why other lens designs were produced after the Tessar was created in 1902.
They are really great for portraits and close work, because the circle of coverage gets larger as we focus closer - and because many have circular apertures - and because they open so wide.
Back in the day, a 4-element lens was pretty sophisticated. Many 35mm SLR cameras came with 50mm Tessar type lenses. Over time, they were largely replaced by lens designs consisting of 6 or more elements: better correction, wider coverage.
We still see Tessars and modified Tessars in long Large Format lenses. When made with modest apertures, they are small lenses, which is important when the focal length is long. For example, the Fujinon C lenses: a modified Tessar design. Compact, sharp, small, and light.
Same with Nikkor M. The 200mm is a favorite because it is so small, light, and sharp. Nobody ever touts it for having huge coverage, so it's not a favorite for architecture or landscape - but for "general" use, it's wonderful.
And I'm not really prone to carefully examining the very corners of my negatives with a loupe. Typically the important bits are located away from the corners. IOW, this might or might not matter. While I happened to get mine with the camera when I was getting into LF years ago, and it's my least used lens, that's more because of the lack of coverage with movements and the fact that I more often prefer the wider 90mm or the longer 203 Ektar I also have than any problem with the corner sharpness. IOW, for me it's sharp enough but lacks coverage for movements and is in a focal length I rarely get that excited about - but when I don't need much coverage and the focal length works, I don't hesitate to use it.