- CLICK MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHY SWIRL BOKEH LENS MANUAL
- CLICK MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHY SWIRL BOKEH LENS FULL
- CLICK MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHY SWIRL BOKEH LENS FREE
The lens is a reinvention of the legendary 19th century optical design of Joseph Petzval with the New Petzval, for the first time ever you can easily get the Petzval photographic look with Canon EF and Nikon F mount analogue and digital cameras. Because of the characteristic swirly bokeh effect that it produces, the New Petzval Lens is perfect for portraits where you want your subject to be the center of attention. The lens produces images with extreme sharpness, strong color saturation, artful vignetting and absolutely beautiful swirly bokeh. Manufactured in Russia by Zenit, each New Petzval lens is crafted from brass and features high-quality glass optics. Canon 1200mm f/5.The Lomography x Zenit New Petzval Lens is a reinvention of one of the first and greatest lenses of all time. 35mm and 80mm variations of the lens exist for $379 and $499 respectively.
CLICK MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHY SWIRL BOKEH LENS FULL
The Composer Pro with Sweet 50 has an aperture of f/2.5 and is compatible with both APS-C and full frame cameras. For $299, you can own a unique lens that allows you swivel your favorite aspect of a photograph into focus while plunging the edges into a deep blur.
It is not really a handy combo but is still manageable. During a visit to the flea market on King’s Day, the lens attracted quite a few glances and raised questions. Not all unique lenses have to break the bank and Lensbaby’s Composer Pro with Sweet 50 Optic helps to prove this point. Together with the Petzval lens I had a beautiful, classic set however, the brass color of the Petzval lens did not really fit with the black and silver body of the Nikon camera. Lensbaby Composer Pro 50: Sweet Spot Focus
Originally designed in 1916 by Hugo Meyer, the lens has successfully reached its crowdfunding goal and will be heading to market later this October for $1000. Another lens that delivers unique bokeh, the Trioplan f/2.8 has an out of focus appearance that people refer to as ‘soap bubbles’. We recently covered the Kickstarter campaign to bring back Meyer Optik’s legendary Trioplan 100mm f/2.8 lens. Meyer Optik Trioplan f/2.8: ‘Soap Bubble’ Bokeh Leica advertises that the lens “out-performs the human eye”, but it is up to you to decide if the $10,000+ price tag is worth it. What this means is that despite having such a wide aperture, the Noctilux-M stays extremely sharp. While not the fastest lens in history, the 50mm f/0.95 is the highest-speed aspherical lens. Leica Noctilux-M 50mm f/0.95: Speed and PrecisionĪ company known for their high-quality German engineering, Leica produced the Noctilux-M 50mm f/0.95 and continued to push the barrier for what is possible. Only three copies of the lens were manufactured one of which appeared and sold on eBay for $50,000 a few years back. The Canon 5200mm has an f-stop of f/14 and is designed to focus on objects over thirty miles away. Weighing in at over two-hundred pounds, without its stand this piece of glass isn’t one you’d take backpacking. The result are aesthetically and technically impressive, with dreamy images with.
CLICK MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHY SWIRL BOKEH LENS MANUAL
He uses a Belle and Howell 51mm f1.2 projector lens and inserts it into an inexpensive macro extension tube in order to give the DIY lens manual focus. If none of the above lenses seem to quench your thirst for focal range, then maybe Canon’s 5200mm prime lens will get you interested. A 50mm f1.2 lens can be quite expensivebetween 1,000 to 1,500but Stern's DIY lens only cost him 20. There are also some hilarious reviews of the lens on the Interwebs.
CLICK MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHY SWIRL BOKEH LENS FREE
Did we mention that it needs its own battery pack for autofocusing? At least it comes with a free case for the $26,000 price tag. The 200-500mm f/2.8 is one of the fastest sports lenses on the market and includes a 2x teleconverter so you can easily zoom in up to 1000m. This piece of equipment is not a bazooka, but rather an extremely fast sports lens designed by Sigma. The price is also a mystery, but what we do know is that the lens is made up of 15 elements in 13 groups and was designed for medium format systems. The lens was designed for an anonymous “wildlife photography fan” in the State of Qatar. If you were a photographer with seemingly unlimited monetary resources, how would you spend your wealth? How about hiring Carl Zeiss to build you a custom lens? In 2006, Carl Zeiss showcased their massive Apo Sonnar T* 1700mm f/4 lens at Photokina in Germany. Carl Zeiss Apo Sonnar T* 1700mm f/4: Super Telephoto The Planar 50mm f/0.7 lenses allowed Kubrick to shoot a scene lit only by natural candlelight in his film, Barry Lyndon – a feat that would have otherwise been impossible. Only ten copies of the lens were manufactured: Carl Zeiss kept a copy, NASA purchased six, and Director Stanley Kubrick bought three.
Originally designed in 1966 to allow NASA capture photographs on the far side of the moon, the Carl Zeiss Planar 50mm f/0.7 is one of the fastest lenses (if not THE fastest) ever produced.