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Re: [OM] TOPE 9 Cameras updated

Subject: Re: [OM] TOPE 9 Cameras updated
From: "John A. Lind" <jlind@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 24 Apr 2002 12:28:06 -0500
At 13:47 4/23/02, Mark Lloyd wrote:
It's interesting in playing around with the 21/3.5 the
lens is 'not' IMHO a very good lens for far away
landscapes. It is way too wide and would be a
nightmare to bracket. After shooting a few rolls with
it I have found it is pretty good for close up
landscapes though. I have some pictures of a park
nearby that the lens worked wonderfully on. I was able
to capture a whole scene rather than just a small part
of one. I'm trying to get the images scanned, but,
this being my first attempt ever it isn't working too
well with flatbed scanners.

Mark,
A super-wide, which I class in the OM system as 21mm and shorter, is not an easy lens to work with. You're very right that "distant" landscapes do not generally work that well with them. Reason? Their perspective expands depth making more distant objects relatively smaller than the human eye would normally perceive them. If the subject material is well distant, not that large and without very close and interesting foreground, a super-wide usually does not work very well. OTOH, if the opposite elements are present, it can be very powerful, provided there is then something of interest spanning the entire angle of view, or very nearly all of it (also a challenge at times).

I'm not surprised to see a fair number of long lenses used. IIRC, most of the longer than normal 50mm lenses are moderate telephotos (85mm - 135mm in the primes; out to 150mm in the zooms).

Comparative shots with rectilinear lenses of different lengths:

Done from approximately the same location:
  18mm:  http://johnlind.tripod.com/oly/gallery/om52.html
  50mm:  http://johnlind.tripod.com/zi/gallery/contax18.html

Same two fence posts. Moved closer with the 135mm to keep them at the frame edges. Note size of background bluffs; used the 200mm to make them bigger than the tractor. A cousin remarked about it: "Our neighbors don't live THAT close!"
  135mm:  http://johnlind.tripod.com/oly/gallery/om58.html
  200mm:  http://johnlind.tripod.com/oly/gallery/om55.html

Made from same location. Background skyline changes relative size along with affecting the entire mood:
  18mm:  http://johnlind.tripod.com/canalwalk/cw27.html
  50mm:  http://johnlind.tripod.com/oly/gallery/om44.html

For the ultimate in using a super-wide to cover a "close in" subject, see this one:
  http://johnlind.tripod.com/oly/gallery/om155.html
Yes, it's not a landscape, but it does demonstrate the "close in" you wrote about to an extreme. The bronze statue is less than 10 feet away, and the camera was positioned at the entrance to the polygon of granite slabs.

-- John


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