Author Archives: 2konbla

17 to 35

Filler with the Sigma 17-35mm F2.8-4 EX.


It has good separation but poor rendition of contrasty out-of-focus highlights especially with trees.


Good color, albeit with traces of Sigma yellow. (And this is at 2500K mind you.) Patrick took this picture!


50cm minimum focus distance can be annoyingly far, but this lens harked back to film days. The later Sigma 17-35mm F2.8-4 EX DG was fixed for digital sensors and didn’t produce internal flare. Then again, internal flare is a rare occurence to me and where I shoot.


35mm.


Poled.


With a 2x teleconverter to make 70mm F8.0. I like the stippled bokeh effect.

This is, unfortunately, the only zoom lens I have in the ‘standard’ range – the other is the Vivitar Series 1 28-105mm F2.8-3.8. The 17-35mm, being a ultra wide-angle lens on full-frame, is chunky and rather big to be a everyday lens.

Many a time I wished I had a APS-C lens like the Sony Carl Zeiss 16-80mm F3.5-4.5 DT or the Tamron 17-50mm F2.8. Of course, my cash is prioritized to other ranges so this won’t get replaced all too soon. Kinda like how I had the Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 DT kit lens for a very long time, since it wasn’t in a critical range – I’d want something wide to normal and normal to tele instead. Based on this philosophy, my ideal APS-C range would have the Tamron 10-24mm F3.5-4.5, Sony 35mm F1.4G and Sigma 50-150mm F2.8 EX DG II HSM or Sony 24-105mm F3.5-4.5. I could shoot with just one lens each day and not feel like I wish I brought the other lens!

Oh and Alphanatics is up! I should mention it since the Sony Alpha 9th August 2008 seminar… which also launched the site, of which I am one of the site admins.

West Side TT

Now, for more shots from that Kg. Pandan Teh Tarik session to welcome East Sider kysham!


Testing his Tokina 28-70mm F2.8 at 50mm F2.8. Amazingly sharp!


Same lens, 70mm F2.8.


However, nothing was as beautiful as his handsome Vivitar 135mm F2.8 M42 lens.


Crisp as heck.


Then came a special hotshoe attachment…


An add-on torchlight with the White Torchlight (or more commonly known as the Minolta 200mm F2.8G HS APO.)


Passport mana?


And then, on to the lens that I previously asked you guys to guess.


Scorchingly sharp wide open and surprisingly free of spherical aberration.


That’s right – the Minolta MC Rokkor 58mm F1.2.

It Don’t Matter If You’re Black Or White

Shots from the Minolta Dynax 7, with Kodak BW 400 CN C-41 black-and-white film. None edited for levels or anything!


Gotta love the subtle tonality. 17mm F2.8 on full-frame!


Same, 17mm F2.8 also. Keeps a fair bit of tone despite the high contrast!


Vivitar 24mm F2.0 DIY Tilt-Shift.


Sony 20mm F2.8.


Sony 28mm F2.8.


8 multiple exposures… should’ve kept it at 4 for simplicity.

And we cut to the teh tarik session for East Sider kysham!


17mm F8. Click for big version.


Minolta 24-85mm F3.5-4.5 at 50mm F4.5. Yes, that’s the Minolta 200mm F2.8G HS APO “White Torchlight” in the picture.


Tokina 20-35mm F3.5-4.5 at 20mm F3.5.


And this, this was from a most beautiful lens indeed.


No prizes for guessing since so many people were there to see it heh.


Gotta love how the light falloff happens! It’s amazingly sharp at the point of focus even wide open. Click for big version.

It’s A Zeiss!


And now, to document my latest addition – the Carl Zeiss Jena Flektogon 35mm F2.4 MC M42 lens!


It only has the DDR coating, but I pimped it with a Sony Carl Zeiss T* MC Protector 49mm filter.


This makes my primes a whopping quintet.

From left, back row: Peleng 8mm F3.5 circular fisheye in M42, Vivitar 24mm F2.0 DIY Tilt-Shift, Carl Zeiss Jena Flektogon 35mm F2.4, Industar 61L/Z 50mm F2.8 in M42, Minolta 50mm F1.4 Original.

From left, front row: Tamron 1.4x teleconverter, Kenko 1.5x teleconverter, Kenko 2x teleconverter, Tamron 2x teleconverter (with broken screw-drive, that aids manual focusing.)


That makes this a possibility: Tamron 200-400mm F5.6, Tamron 2x, Kenko 1.5x, Kenko 2x, Minolta Dynax 7. The Kenko 2x and Tamron 1.4x are strangely particular as they have a notch in front which disallows teleconverters from being put in front, which is why only one of them can be behind the lens. This combination makes a 400mm + 2x + 1.5x + 2x = 2400mm F32 lens, or 3600mm-like view in APS-C.


Oh yes, and my zoom lineup from left to right: Sigma 17-35mm F2.8-4 EX, Vivitar Series 1 28-105mm F2.8-3.8, Sigma 70-210mm F4-5.6, Cosina 70-210mm F2.8-4 1:2.5x Macro, Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan, Tamron 200-400mm F5.6.


The Sony CZ MC Protector has sweet packaging!


Complete with a spring-loaded case.


And now, for some flare tests. Left to right: Toshiba Skylight SL-1A, Hoya HMC UV(N) (cheapo one), Sony Carl Zeiss T* MC Protector, all in 49mm filter thread size.


The Toshiba fares worst, with ghosting and flare; the Hoya does well with ghosting (reduced green inverted image of the flash) but keeps some flare; the CZ is examplary with flare and keeping contrast but keeps some ghosting. All tested with the flare-ful Minolta 50mm F1.4.

I also tried once against the Hoya Pro1D but that wasn’t conclusive as it was a 55mm one whenever I held the filter in front of the lens, the angle I was holding it at, changed quite a bit… and that little change can introduce flare. So to be fair I’d have to test again with a tripod!


Anyway, what I like about the Flektogon, as I’ll now refer to it, is how close you can get to anything! A record-breaking 19cm! That’s something no auto-focus lens does.

All the Carl Zeiss Flektogons were noted for close-range focus. Heck, Carl Zeiss is still doing close focus in fashion – the Sony Carl Zeiss 135mm F1.8 ZA for Sony/Minolta mount does 72cm close!

The Canon 135mm F2.0L USM does only 90cm close. Their 70-200mm F2.8L IS USM also does 1.5 meters close (and so does the Nikkor 70-200mm F2.8 VR) while the Minolta and Sony 70-200mm F2.8 G SSM does 1.2 meters close! The Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan does 1.1 meters close, while the Tamron and Sony 55-200mm F4-5.6 DT do 95cm close.

Why does the minimum focus distance matter when none are any substitute for a true macro lens?

Because you can use it in really tight spaces. 1.2 meters means you don’t have to get out of your seat to shoot somebody sitting at the same small table. 1.5 meters forces you to.


Maximum magnification is 2.29x (55mm/24mm APS-C frame size). These tests should be shot wide open.

Speaking of which, I got the Flektogon for real cheap because it had a broken aperture ring which was loose and didn’t change the aperture. The M/A switch was also loose, and so was the pin.


One of my very first shots, with Eiraku, who was buying a Volna-9 50mm F2.8 from the same seller. Note the blue fringing, which is the only optical weakness of this lens.


35mm on APS-C is like the lovely 50mm on full-frame – neither wide nor tele, and very natural to our eyes.


You could just point at anything you see and the 35mm would frame it nicely.


Another plus or minus point of the Flektogon was that it was typical Zeiss – overcontrasty, with a tendency to burn mids and overexpose highlights in out-of-focus areas. Note the white shirt.


And now, for some comparisons of close-up range power…


…and more.


Yes, the last example came out of this whopper. The extension tubes in the middle made it easy to hold like some sort of lightsaber.


50mm primes from left to right: Volna-9 50mm F2.8, Industar 61L/Z 50mm F2.8, Minolta 50mm F1.4 Original, Minolta 50mm F1.7 Re-Styled.


The Volna-9 and Industar 61L/Z share the same star-shaped iris between F5.6-8.


And one more, from the front.


My favorite shot from the Flektogon. There’s just a certain 3D-ness about it, and it renders flare very pleasingly (this was without a filter when I just got it.)

Click here for a large, large version. Click already, dammit!

Xfresh X-gig!

May 31st 2008 – the Xfresh X-gig at Republic, Sunway Pyramid! Yep it was about time we had our own gig.


Rithan of Deja Voodoo Spells warming up.


It was a sunny afternoon. Man, I miss afternoon gigs. Makes for easy exits with public transport.


Outside, there was an extreme sports competition which I don’t remember what exactly. But hey, this photographer is using The Force.


Soundcheck.


Sam CF Band started the show.


Dance To The Radio. Indie meets post-rock. I like!


They like it, too.


Then, the jumpy-frontmanned The Peanuts!


I love how the stage lights were bright and colorful, and the sunlight came in from the side, giving a little boost.


Amazing showmanship!


And that is all from them.

Oh, and this shot (as well as #1, #2, #3, #5 and #6) show the lens I just bought earlier that day – the Carl Zeiss Jena Flektogon 35mm F2.4 in M42 mount. Geeking out post dedicated to that will come soon!

I love the way the Zeiss handles flare! It makes it look almost pleasant to have flare in your pictures, the way it colors it.


And then there were punk rockers Bunkface!


Solid, solid band with Sum Blinkin’ Green influences.


All cameras to the Scout!


He really, really sounded like Billy Joe Armstrong. Looked a bit like him, too!


All shots of Bunkface were taken with the Zeiss. I am now a believer!

I am glad that I can buy auto-focusing Zeiss lenses for my Sony Alpha. It’s different from that classic Minolta look, for sure, but the bokeh on this Flektogon isn’t too shabby compared to some other Zeiss lenses. Also has that characteristic contrasty mid-burning, highlight-popping effect on out-of-focus areas.


And then it was Pop Shuvit, if you can still call them rap metal.


You can count on them to rock out.


Pardon my geeking out, but I love how it renders flare!


The Times, Brit indie at its best.

This is my all-time favorite shot with the Zeiss! There’s just a certain 3D-ness about it.

Click here for a large, large version. Click already, dammit!


And then, ending the show was Deja Voodoo Spells, a top-notch shredder band.


With guest star Adam of Dragon Red on vocals!


Rithan and his guitar licks.


Mie and his bass solo (which included the Doraemon theme song!)


Rithan Facts: Rithan does not bend guitar strings. He bends the guitar.


Rithan Facts: During high-speed solos, hands conjure out of nowhere to help him pick more notes.

Oh, there’s another X-gig coming up:

What: Xfresh X-gig
Where: Zouk Kuala Lumpur, Jalan Ampang
When: Saturday 2nd August 2008, 2pm to 6pm
How Much: FREE ENTRY!
Who: The Aggrobeats, Couple, They Will Kill Us All, Bittersweet (plus an open band session, so bring your stuff!)

Triple Jay In May

Feeling the blues? How about some Juke Joint Jupiter, May 22nd 2008 at Laundry Bar huh?


Ito, vocalist of The Blues Gang!


(Not with his band, though.)


This guy played far from wooden.


Then there were The Travellers!


Give me a moment while I finish this complicated drum passage.


And then there was the hard-rockin’ Blister!


In leather jackets, they did all-American hard rock. Steppenwolf – Born To Be Wild was one such cover, if I remember.


Showmanship!


As you can tell, I’m a massive fan of Led Zeppelin… the tattoo on my left hand is the sigils from Led Zeppelin IV.


Our guitarist however is a fan of guitar licks played literally.


Cooperative shredding. The grabber is also grabbing some frets.


This frontman rocks! AC/DC yeowww!


Spot a Jimmy Page-ism.


Then, there was Zip Zeiller.


For some reason, they did not blow me away this time. 🙁 I was expecting them to!

Fifty One Fifty

I finally tried the Sigma 50-150mm F2.8 HSM APO Macro… for Canon mount. Since I was so curious to see the sharpness and bokeh, I popped a CF card in the shop’s Canon EOS 40D.


40D, 150mm F2.8 ISO1600 1/200s. Auto White Balance. This is the whole image. Bokeh is a mixed bag – some look excellent, some look a bit too contrasty. In this case the handphone being held up is a bit distracting.


A 100% crop from the part which was most in focus. Not scorchingly sharp, but usable since this was at the default setting.

I’ll admit that I love consumer sharpening, so I dived into the menu and pumped up the sharpness, saturation, tone. All of them, to 7. This explains how I got the 40D to look this noisy at ISO1600 heh.


40D, 150mm F2.8 ISO1600 1/250s. Auto White Balance. Uhhh, this is weird, even for AWB with tungsten light.


I like how it makes the OOF highlights glow, and the signboard text that has been blurred out in the top-left corner isn’t too bad. Could be worse.

This reminds me of my Sigma 17-35mm F2.8-4 EX non-DG; contrast is strong, even in out-of-focus areas. Occasionally though, you can get good separation.

Given a good background, this lens would shine.

The 40D at 5.75 FPS (due to shooting at 1/250s you don’t get 6.5 FPS) and HSM made for great tracking of walking subjects.

Longitudinal chromatic aberration is of the modern type – more greenish cyan behind the subject, to magenta in front of the subject.

Minor 40D rant

An immediately noticeable niggle was the thumbwheel of the 40D – scrolling through burst mode I had to wait until the image appeared in full crispness before I scroll to the next picture. If I scrolled too fast some of the images would appear to be taken from very low-resolution thumbnails (and occasionally, the dimensions would shrink, with black borders.) Hence, I had to scroll slowly with my thumb. Makes me appreciate the Alpha’s embedded thumbnails especially when you want to pick pictures to delete quickly (or watch burst mode animations on your screen). Oh yes, you can’t hold down the joystick to scroll.

Back to the lens

Anyway, I love the size and weight of this lens – it’s just a bit shorter than the Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan, a bit fatter, and just as heavy, clocking under 800 grams. Which is loads lighter than the overrated 70-200mm F2.8 lenses everybody lusts for, which go for 1.4 kilograms or so.

Interestingly, the internal zoom mechanism looks the same from the front, also.

I’ve always wanted 50mm on my beercan more than 200mm, on APS-C, when shooting gigs and events… so I could make do with a 50-150mm should anything happen to my beercan, God forbid!

Use a 50-150mm on your APS-C dSLR, not the 70-200mm! You don’t use a 24-70mm on APS-C, do you? You’d use a 17-50mm on APS-C, yes? If you can sell the 17-50mm when changing to a full-frame body, of course you can sell the 50-150mm.

There’s one reason why I love Pentax – they’re the only brand that has a complete APS-C lineup:

10-17mm F3.5-4.5 fisheye
12-24mm F4
14mm F2.8 (much much smaller than full-frame versions)
16-50mm F2.8
17-70mm F4
21mm F3.2 pancake
40mm F2.8 pancake
50-135mm F2.8 (Pentax is the only brand that recognizes the importance of this range on APS-C)
70mm F2.4 pancake
55-300mm F4-5.8 (WHOA! That’s a new range, and it beats the Canon 55-250mm F4-5.6 IS by a hair.)

So why don’t I have any APS-C lenses?

…because I have a full-frame body.

And yet, when I have the cash, I will look into a different walkaround lens – the Sigma 17-35mm F2.8-4 EX non-DG is an ultra-wide on full-frame and is also huge and fat and horribly attention-grabbing. A small, wide prime would be great. If it was an APS-C pancake lens, I wouldn’t mind.

Why I don’t like 200mm on APS-C that much

Even when I used a 200-400mm at the Sunburst Music Festival, 200mm was too long. So I knew that I wouldn’t miss 200mm. Even the Minolta 200mm F2.8G HS APO I had for a few days was a bit too long for my usage.