How does it work? Do you mount that on the enlarger 90 degrees off when printing or something like that?
It adds 2 cylindrical elements that squeeze the image in one direction. Its a bit of a kludge and you have to focus both the anamorphic lens and the taking lens, not that different from focusing with tilt I suppose!
In theory you would mount it to the enlarger, but on axis not rotated. This is how anamorphic film projection used to work at the movies, as long as the squeeze factor of the lens on the camera and projector matched it would squeeze and then unsqueezed the image. I am one of those hybrid workflow devils though, so I will just use photoshop!
Finally got out to shoot some city scape on provia today, will be excited to share what I learned once I get the film back.
Finally circling back on this and thought id share the results.
1. In a general sense works fine, but....
2. does vignette on my 135mm lens (not too bad though)
3. Does soften the image (know aspect of front element anamorphic)
4. Focusing is a massive pain in the
Below I am posting an un-stretched image out of camera, a stretched image (133.33%) and what the field of view would be without a anamorphic squish.
Out of camera:
4x5 Provia 100F
Stretched:
4x5 Provia 100F
Non-anamorphic field of view:
4x5 Provia 100F
Overall, I am pretty happy with the results, and may continue to explore this.
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