Hi,
I had purchased a 75mm f 4.5 Rodenstock Grandngon N..... The big
advantage to this lens is that its f 4.5 aperture is fast( good for low
light , the lens is light weight and small compared to others ( great for
backpacking) and only takes a 67 mm filter which was consistent with my
other lenses................ ( Some wide angle lenses take 105 mm filters
which start at about $150 each and you can get into some serious money for
a graduated filter($500+......)........
The reason I chose a 75 mm is that it gives me the widest angle of
view I can get with out distortion or fish eye effect.... ...... It has a
195 mm image circle compared to the 161 mm needed to cover the 4x5 film.
It does cut down on my movements compared to a 90 mm but I still have about
1/2 inch up or down and side to side ...........So if your back is against
the wall it is a good choice.
The Schneider 72mmXL f 5.6 has a 226 mm image circle so if your
doing serious architectural you may want to consider that or go to the 90mm
size..........The 90mm Grandagon N has a 226 mm image circle.
John Cremati
----- Original Message -----
From: "Shannon Stoney" <sstoney@pdq.net>
To: <pure-silver@freelists.org>
Cc: <alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca>
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2005 9:37 AM
Subject: wide-angle lens for 4x5
> Hi, I am supposed to do some architectural photography in the
> coming month, and I am thinking about borrowing or buying a wider
> format lens than the one I'm accustomed to shooting with. Right now
> I have a 150mm lens. What would be a good length to look for? I
> will be shooting in a prison near Houston called The Walls.
>
> Also, I think I might have to learn to do the perspective correction
> thing. Any suggestions about web sites or books to look at?
>
> thanks,
>
> --shannon
>
>
>
> _____________________________________________________
> This message scanned for viruses by CoreComm
>
Received on Tue Oct 18 09:47:01 2005
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : 11/07/05-09:46:19 AM Z CST