Any photographs shot with Canon 50mm f1.2L,Pentax A 50mm f1.2, Voigtlander 58mm f1.4 and any 50mm lenses will be posted here.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Plum Flowers by Voigtlander Nokton 58mm f1.4




Voigtlander Nokton 58mm is always a lens that I like to use to blur things. It blurs everything in a very gentle manner. The low contrast helps me to accentuate the colour later on when I want to in photoshop.

Hard to manual focus with this lens though

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Seafood soup by Leica 50mm f2 Summicron





From Pearl Restaurant - 2 hat restaurant in Richmond Melbourne. Very creamy soup with strong pipi flavour!

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Youth day by Leica 50mm f2 Summicron R





This yellow outfit makes him a banana man. He is a really fun man with so much energy. The smile has been his trademark on this very special day - Youth day






Chromatic Aberation by Pentax A 50mm f1.2





Chromatic Aberration

Many a times we come across various Optical terms that seem to fall on deaf ears. Not only they prove to be jargons but also drown us in a state of confusion as it is a human-tendency to start guessing thing which we don’t know.



Chromatic Aberration is one such term that many of you might no be able to explain. A person who uses any form of camera must know this term well as it is closely related to property of a camera-lens.Starting with the basic meaning of Aberration, it is stated that it is the inability of a lens to produce an exact image, particularly at the edges of the photograph. Hence Chromatic Aberration would simply mean the inability of a lens to converge all the wavelengths to a single common point, thus causing a blur. You can also say that Chromatic Aberrations are color deviations of lens systems.This is a common problem in large aperture telephoto lenses that are used to detect astronomical activities and even shoot the closest wild pictures of rare species.In modern times, most of the expensive cameras have special lenses that are protected from such defects. But in most of the normal cameras, the problem of Chromatic Aberration persists. Every one of us has heard a common term in photography, ‘Purple Fringing’. The extremely small micro lenses of our digital camera that are used to collect more light for each CCD pixel are usually built and fine-tuned in such a way that they can focus the green wavelength perfectly.



The inability to focus the red and blue wavelengths results in purple fringing around the images.Ordinary cameras which have a very small pixel-pitch as in non-DSLR digital cameras have to incorporate a special processing step to remove it.Sometimes extremely sharp digital cameras may face the same problem. The image captured by the lens might have some really small areas. This tiny area is unable to stimulate red, blue and green color pixels and due to absence of some wavelength the captured image has some portion stored with incorrect color.Some of you might be thinking that avoiding colored photography is the simplest solution to this problem. But you are in for a surprise again because Chromatic Aberration affects Black & White Photography also.

The phenomenon blurs the image completely. This problem can be overcome by exposing your original image for a longer duration of time to the lens.A very common example to experience is the blooming period for new leaves. At the time of sunrise, try capturing the image of the filtered sun-rays that pass in between the new leaves and reach the ground. When you see the image, you’ll see the increasing visibility of purple-fringing.Hence, it is a good piece of advice to thoroughly check the lens features for Chromatic Aberration when you go to buy a new camera.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Street Sketch by Canon EF 50mm f1.2 L









Melbourne is getting quite artistic these days. I saw so many artists doing this sort of business in the streets these days. I see that it did please quite a lot of couples in love :)

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Slow Rock by Leica 50mm f2 Summicron R





At my local club, the night was a quite one. Not many spectators... The guy was humming a little too quietly. I thought there were snake hissing around.


Leica 50mm f2 R as a little small lens to bring to such place without intimidating the artists


Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Moomba Sunset by Olympus 50mm f2 macro

This was taken yesterday on the way home from the Moomba Festival. I saw this beautiful scenery but got no lenses with me to shoot this scene with! So I got this macro lens for the landscape. It was very dark and the ISO setting was set at 800...

So this shot was taken by f2.2

Interestingly, it is always the most inconvinient time to use the least likely lens to use

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Graffiti by Leica 50mm f2 Summicron R




This was captured in one of the small alleys of Richmond. A location where there is only space for a person. It was quite a puzzle how a person could possibly paint something like this in such a narrow space alley!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Seascape by Voigtlander Nokton 58mm f1.4




My regular afternoon walk along the coast can discover weird landscape shot like this. The light in the distant sea seems to mix with dust of some sort. Quite a view :)

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