Luminous Landscape Forum
Equipment & Techniques => Cameras, Lenses and Shooting gear => Topic started by: MarkSe on December 22, 2011, 04:08:20 pm
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I use a 5dmkII with 17ts-e and 24ts-e for architectural photography. I would like to buy a 35mm lens too, what can you recommend? It should be sharp and free of distortions and free of CAs!
sadly there are no good 35mm ts-e lenses at the moment...
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Try the 24TS with the new 1.4x extender. Gets you to 33.6mm. Introduces a little bit of barrel distortion, but overall I'm very satisfied with this setup. The extender will cost you almost $500, but that's a steal considering you effectively getting a new TS lens. And it'll work on some of your other lenses, too.
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Since you are used to manual focus lenses, I would recommend some sort of Zeiss 35mm lens for Cannon. I would expect that the 35mm f/1.4 Distagon stopped down will preform as good as, if not better then the 35mm f/2 Distagon (if you really care about the subtleties, which I am too lazy to look up even though I have an account, go to digloyd and check out his extensive reviews of these two.) They both should be superior to the Canon 35mm f/1.4L which, based on your other lenses, I would assume would be your comparative Cannon choice. The Zeiss 35mm f/2. is quite smaller, if that is any consideration.... also whether you want autofocus or not is kind of a big question there.
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The lens you're looking for is the Zeiss 35mm 2.8 Shift. No tilt, but a great shift lens. And you'll need a C/Z > EOS lens mount adapter to go with it. The next choice would be the Olympus 35mm 2.8 Shift, which, while not quite as nice a lens as the Zeiss, is about one quarter the price.
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thanks I think i will try the 24ts with the 1.4x extender first!
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This may sound a bit odd, but.
Try using the 24TS-E with the new 1.4x III teleconverter.
I've only played a little with it myself, but the results are pretty damn good.
Regards
Mark.
PS: Appears I'm blind as this was suggested above :)
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The Zeiss 35mm f1.4 is a fantastic lens but I haven't tested it for landscapes. Note it has a good dose of field curvature. (see the drop off on it's MTF).
However this should be minimal when stopped down to f8-11.
The Zeiss 35mm f2 has a flatter field but more CA and is not quite as sharp in the center.
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I use a 5dmkII with 17ts-e and 24ts-e for architectural photography. I would like to buy a 35mm lens too, what can you recommend? It should be sharp and free of distortions and free of CAs!
sadly there are no good 35mm ts-e lenses at the moment...
I use the Olympus 35mm shift lens, mine is a Sinaron version which apparently were hand picked by Sinar for an early digital system. It performs very well, not quite as good as the 17 & 24 TSE lenses, but better than the original 24m TSE. There is some CA which is easily removed in post production.
I used to have the Canon 35mm TS lens in film days, I wish Canon would produce a TSE lens in this range. I would like to see a 32mm, which would nicely fill the gap between 24mm & 45mm. ( Maybe they could update the 45 & 90, and make a 65mm TSE too ).
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I use a 5dmkII with 17ts-e and 24ts-e for architectural photography. I would like to buy a 35mm lens too, what can you recommend? It should be sharp and free of distortions and free of CAs!
sadly there are no good 35mm ts-e lenses at the moment...
If shift/drop only is enough (no tilting), you may try the old nikkor 35mm f2.8 pc via an adapter, very sharp! Regards, Theodoros. www.fotometria.gr
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35 FA Pentax with Zork Shift adapter