Category Archives: Geek

Single Reflex


I’ve been bitten by the pyramid scheme of the glorious 100% coverage 0.73x magnification viewfinder of the Sony Alpha 900.

It’s the brightest viewfinder I’ve seen among the “affordable” full-frame dSLRs available (even looking through a Canon 5D MkII, I felt like I was looking through a polarizer.) The A900’s viewfinder is so big, you feel like you could live inside it. But not just that – it’s also very bright! I guess I’ll skip the optional Type-M precision focus screen to have the joy of a viewfinder that doesn’t look like it’s there at all.


oooH, a top LCD panel to hush the whiners who never understood why the Minolta Dynax 7 had the LCD at the back and at such a font size.

Coincidentally, most settings always showed inside the viewfinder, which is what I loved about the A700. I can tweak Drive mode and it would show inside the viewfinder!


A beefier grip with a curve fits my hand perfectly.

I will whine about the missing Eye-Start Continuous AF (I used it to activate AF-C because I usually use Direct Manual Focus). This was half due to users not wanting the feature (or using it) and due to EU regulations that ban nickel (which some people are supposedly allergic to.) The grip sensor found on the A700 was made of nickel, and EU models shipped without the grip sensor!


Devoid of stickers except at the bottom. NOM!

Mirror slap is felt when the mirror goes back down. I like it, it’s like a pump-action shotgun!


So what was the first shot I took of it? My faithful Sony Alpha 700, that’s what. Okay perhaps a more glamorous shot should’ve been done.

It’s taking a break for a long-needed servicing and maintenance. So no pixel-peeping comparison shots!


Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 DT versus Boon’s Minolta 24-105mm F3.5-4.5.


Minolta 24-105mm F3.5-4.5 at 24mm F3.5. Yes light fall-off I know, but it looks… nice!


Minolta 24-105mm F3.5-4.5 at 105mm F4.5.


So what do 24.6 megapixels mean? It means that a 100% crop is that big!


Sigma 17-35mm F2.8-4 EX at 17mm F7.1.


100% crop! Madness. Try to spot what I was zooming in on, on the picture above!

Yes, it would seem rather noisy at ISO800. But make it a 66% crop and you get the same noise levels as the A700. I should’ve been able to get more sharpness at say F16 as diffraction doesn’t kick in so soon for bigger sensors. If my ol’ Sigma was up to it, that is.

The A900 definitely outresolves my eyes. However, much care must be taken to focusing due to the shallow depth of field caused by being closer to the subject when using a full-frame SLR.


Minolta 50mm F1.4 at F1.4. The A900 seems to pull much better glow and potential from this lens. I know I was inspired indeed! (Though not him, he was tired of waiting for his turn to touch it.)

So I had to sell some stuff which I don’t use much anyway (and will continue to offload.) Thanks to Anas, Ken, Jeffry, Yeong, Wong, Alexes, Malek, George and of course Alex (I owe you big time man!)


And now, we rewind to the Sony Alpha Convention 2008, a 3-day event at Meridien KL, KL Sentral. Wow I finally have Chinese squinty eyes in this one!


My lightsaber of daylight-to-tungsten gel.


There were various talks – this is a capture off Grant Corban’s excellent wedding photography talk.


Everybody took screenshots. 🙂


Some talks had the bad timing of being right after a hearty lunch.


Lunch, you say? Milk chocolate fondue, that was a first for me!


You could also be snapping babes with the Harleys parked in the hall.


Uhuh.


Macdude‘s talk even had a hands-on with studio lighting!


While I never got possession of the radio trigger, I used my F58 flash to trigger KJ’s F42 flash wirelessly.


(Cut to an A900 with the Minolta 16mm F2.8 diagonal fisheye.) Oh, and then there was a talk by George, the Product Manager of the Sony Alpha brand in Malaysia, for those walk-ins (400 seats were for Alpha customers only.) What I felt was really cool was that he was, at that time, explaining something technical I care a lot about – White Balance, in Kelvins. Ironic that it all started when he asked me to turn off AWB…


…and let’s crop this 24.6 megapixel file.


Ted-is-my-friend and some girl who wants to be his friend. With Ted’s A900 + 50mm F1.4.


On the last day, prizes were given out – the A700 + Sony 18-250mm F3.5-6.3 DT went to Azrin for a blog contest.


Then there was the participation contest – ask a good question during the talks, and get a sticker. This uncle got the most stickers! There was a certain look on his face when he saw the crowd of green eyes. I think it was fear. After all, he just won an A900.


KJ didn’t win anything but he’s still happy.

Gliding High On Sugar


Sugar glider madness!


5 FPS at F1.4 and blending is not fast enough.


That, and you never know the exact point when they will jump.


So maybe you test the waters…


…or you divert to other cutesy things.


Oh and fragrant cockroaches (not that I’ve smelt… and that’s not my hand.)


Pinky!


Just a bit more!


So then we had an idea. What if we used the strobe function of my HVL-F56AM?


17mm F7.1 ISO200 at 1/10th of a second. It was probably 10 times at 100 Hertz at 1/32th power.

This was the first lucky shot, and it was also the last – every other time we tried, we’d fire the shutter and capture the sugar glider already landed. Either that, or we fired too early. It wouldn’t reliably jump, either.

I’d loved to have used a longer shutter speed to allow more time to catch the sugar glider… but longer shutter speeds would burn out the background, which was full of ambient light. Thus the only place this can happen is in a dark, dark studio…

S.B.V.

I got a free Alpha Shooting Vest at the Sony Alpha Convention 2008 held at Le Meridien Hotel, 10th-12th October 2008. But instead of pictures, here are two videos for those who are not assured that this is an amazingly practical bag!

How to wear the Alpha Shooting Vest quickly (and how to remove it quickly!)

If the video does not load, click here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8GSDMMS9iLY

Another video – how much can you put in an Alpha Shooting Vest?

If the video does not load, click here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pZvBAJPlCE

The sequence of what I took out:
1. Small flash (Sony HVL-F42AM)
2. Fisheye lens (Peleng 8mm F3.5 circular fisheye)
3. Big flash (Sony HVL-F58AM)
4. Prime lens and teleconverter (Minolta 50mm F1.4 and 1.5x teleconverter)
5. Medium telephoto (Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan)
6. Extra SLR body (Minolta Dynax 7)
7. Super telephoto (Tamron 200-400mm F5.6)
8. SLR camera with standard lens (Sony Alpha 700 with Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 DT)

Pictures of the vest itself will come later! 🙂

Mula Meredang

And now for some shots from the company trip in Redang (anywhere from the 27th February 2008 to 1st March 2008.)


How long more will this ferry take?


At last! (Okay this was from the resort next door…)


We went straight for the beach…


…where some got sand-based enhancements.


Victory!


Some of us found love.


Some of us found our way onto the rocks.


Some of us would rather camwhore on the rocks.


Some of us become camera ads.


Rames contemplating a shot.


Me taking a jump shot with 2 wireless Sony HVL-F56AM flashes. Picture taken by my product manager. Spot me in the corner, and spot an unsynchronized colleague!


Spot me in the middle bottom, a little inch of my head. Yes I took that Heroes picture that you see on smashpOp‘s blog.


They can jump, but this can fly!


100% crop using my Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan. It was very far away!


A squirrel and what he thinks is a wooden acorn.


A squirrel outside my window in a more natural position.


A camwhore in a natural position.


Yes, that’s natural light and the light fall-off is from the roof so it was already there!


A tinge of green in the Alpha’s Kelvin WB setting did the trick. (Yes, even the Alpha 200 has Kelvin WB with Color Compensation Filter, real nifty.)


Elsewhere, the camwhoring continued.


…all the way into the night.


Technology brings light to darkness.


A bunch of them disappeared, and we found them in the next resort watching a Chinese band.


Mmm hmm.


I spy a longing.


Charades, with the theme being movies.


It’s getting late so I’m going…


Alright then it’s time to head into the chalet!

More here:
Habis Meredang

Walking Around Work


And now for some random crops from around TPM!

I love penumbra – the part where a shadow fades away. It’s quite like the bokeh of shadows!


Birding with the Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan. I think this was a crop, 25% of the image width.


Same here!


This should be a 50% crop.


And this is not a crop – it’s the Carl Zeiss Jena Flektogon 35mm F2.4. Bokeh is pretty good. Sometimes.


But what I love, is how it makes a perfect normal angle to an APS-C camera like my A700!


It gets real tight and close…


This close.


Feelin’ lucky?

Light Painting With The Kit Lens As A Snoot

You can do light painting with a flash that can be set to manual power. How?

First, turn off all your lights!

Put the camera on a tripod with a 10 second timer so you have time to grab the flash and start painting. I set the flash at its maximum zoom (105mm for my Sony HVL-F58AM) at 1/8th power and pressed the Test button around the subject, pretending to be stage light.


50mm F8 ISO800, 25 seconds.

Whoops that’s overexposed – let’s stop it down a bit more.


50mm F11 ISO400, 25 seconds.

Ah, that’s better! However, I accidentally got the flash head in the shot. Supposing I wanted to simulate smaller stage light, I’d need to snoot the light (in other words, shrink the size of the light.)


50mm F11 ISO400, 25 seconds.

How did I snoot it?

Using a Sony 18-70mm F3.5-5.6 DT kit lens with a rubber hood attached! Alpha mount lenses by default close down the aperture blades when not attached to a camera. Thus, when the lens is at 18mm, it is at its darkest aperture of F22, where its opening is 18mm/22 = 0.818mm wide!

If you’re using a different mount lens, make sure it has an aperture ring so you can set the aperture manually. Canon EF/EF-S lenses have electronically controlled apertures so they cannot be used.

I hold the snooted flash with the rubber hood in my left hand, and my right hand on the flash to press the Test button.

You may want to experiment with different power settings on your flash as well.

Saranayo


Why did you have to leave us, Naomi?


Oh because they want to send me back to Japan-hor!


And so, we had a farewell at Bumbu Bali a certain 19th of June 2008. Nice place, nice soup!


Mmm. Shot with my Carl Zeiss Jena Flektogon 35mm F2.4 at F2.4… because the aperture blades are stuck and I cannot stop down.


At the minimum focus distance of 19 cm. Insane!


When you’re Japanese, you gotta deck out your phone yo.


This also doubles as a privacy-ensuring screen.


Yow (also farewelled) and a looming figure in the background.


smashpOp doing his camwhoring thing. Yes did you know he’s my colleague!


Yes, he has a Carl Zeiss Tessar.


So how did I make the first picture out of this picture?

To make this effect in Photoshop, first press Ctrl-1, then Ctrl-2, then Ctrl-3. You’ll see whether the Red, Green or Blue channels are most dramatic. In this case, the blue channel (Ctrl-3) is the most dramatic.

So we press Ctrl-A to select all, then Ctrl-C to copy. Press Ctrl-` (to the left of the 1 key) to return to full RGB view, then Ctrl-V to paste a new layer on top.

In the blending mode, choose Luminosity. Press Ctrl-E to flatten the layers. Press Ctrl-U to adjust saturation, and desaturate accordingly. Finally, adjust the Levels manually as you see fit to bring out shadows.

Thanks also to also-my-colleague-Rames. He didn’t know that I took this when I took it!

D Links

Ch-ch-ch-check it out!

Sly & The Family Stone Radio – Last.fm

I was in a pretty crap mood at work and instinctively loaded up some cleansing/destressing thrash/speed/death metal on Winamp. For some reason I itched to find more Sly & The Family Stone stuff (having been hooked to If You Want Me To Stay for a whole week) and I got here and I haven’t been able to pause the playlist and go back to the metal I queued up.

So cool I found out all the original singers for all these songs I’ve heard before! And I’ve heard alternate (or perhaps original versions) of James Brown – I Got You (I Feel Good) and Wilson Pickett – Sugar Sugar. I don’t know how to tell it to play just ONE artiste though, but I’m happier with the selections than any other online radio that promises to give music in a similar vein, such that I can’t hit Skip.

Oh, and Bill Withers was so widely covered and yet I’d never heard of him before this.

For some reason, a lot of songs remind me of Davinaaa!

Now, for more happy links:

Lolcats ‘n’ Funny Pictures of Cats – I Can Has Cheezburger?

Ooo, Sony actually used one in their Alpha 300/350 ads:
http://icanhascheezburger.com/2008/05/10/funny-pictures-kung-fuin-ur-bubblz/#comments

Apparently, it has sister sites, too!

GraphJam: Music and Pop Culture in Charts and Graphs. Let us explain them.

…and…

FAIL Blog: Pictures and Videos of Owned, Pwnd and Fail Moments

And now, for more random links!

Stop Motion Rubik’s Cube solve *Original*
Escher 3D Puzzle? Lego? New way to play puzzle!
4x4x4 Trajber’s Octahedron Rubik’s Cube
Pyracosaminx Puzzle
Custom Cylinder Rubik’s Cube (glued on layer)

Buy me a weird Rubik’s Cube-like puzzle if you’re travelling and see one, alright? 😀

Fifty Eight Is Great

And now, for my full-on geekout report of the new Sony HVL-F58AM flash with Quick Shift Bounce! This is affectionately known as the Cobra Head.

* I’ve added a Color Temperature Orange warming gel with a custom-made cardboard holder. Doesn’t he look like Decepticon Shockwave, guardian of the Cybertron Space Bridge?


Its new swivelling design allows you to quickly bounce the flash upwards in portrait orientation. With any other flash of any other brand, you’d need to press a button to unlock the flash head to allow it to turn!

With this, there are no buttons to unlock movement. I can nudge the flash head with my chin if I wanted to!


It also comes with a wider, foldable stand to support its weight as it turns extreme angles. Here, it is rolling 45 degrees left.

I shall now refer to the HVL-F58AM by its short form, the F58, and the same for all Sony Alpha flashes.


Its body is a lot fatter; here you see it almost aligns with the head of my Sony Alpha 700. The body is lighter despite it carrying the batteries, and it may feel a bit flimsy if you rotate it when it’s not attached to a camera… but the moment it’s on a camera it feels very solid and doesn’t feel like it could break if you rotate it too quickly.

Having used it for a few jobs already, I can say that this makes portrait-orientation bounce flash, rear-bounce flash, ceiling-bounce top-down macro flash all very easy and quick to get to. The built-in white card really helps, to give a bit of front fill. No more “hold on…” while I attempt to mash down on the flash head unlock button. My F56’s flash head was rather hard to unlock!


This is the F42. (Thanks to KJ.) This has the conventional pitch and yaw turning flash head. Left is how it looks like in bounce mode, with the wide-panel diffuser pulled up to provide some front fill flash. Right is the same but in portrait orientation – notice how the wide-angle diffuser is no longer facing the front? There is no way for it to face the front.


And so, we have the F58 (left) and F42 (right) this time stocked with a Gary Fong Whaletail clone. People here call it the toiletbowl, but I will not show you why here!


Both in portrait mode. See that the F58 keeps the white card (I did not pull out the wide-angle diffuser) while the toiletbowl Whaletail keeps the light pointing forward.

The F58 gets rid of the Whaletail, DEMB Diffuser and any other re-orienting diffuser on the market! Now all you need is a white card for some front fill, and maybe a Stofen Omnibounce if you’re fussy. Of course, I like being able to quickly slip on my orange gel cardboard holder, so I don’t use a Stofen.

I’ve noticed that the F58 is a lot more secure in the hotshoe, and the exposures are very consistent. Or maybe that’s just me.

Yes, I like my F58 very much! One F58 fired from camera left, about 70mm zoom, F56 bounced off wall on right, on camera right.

Wireless Ratio Control

Finally, a wireless ratio control system on digital bodies! The wireless controller mode of the F56 could only be used on Minolta film SLRs which supported it. On the Konica Minolta 5D and 7D and all subsequent Sony Alphas it simply could not be used… neither was the Ratio control on the F56.

There are two modes;

CTRL1 = CTRL+ = 3 Group Mode

Now when they say 3 group mode… one group is the CTRL group, on the camera. So I wouldn’t call the solitary F58 sitting on the camera a “group”, but heck…

The other 2 groups are called RMT and RMT2. You can set the F58 to be in RMT or RMT2 (and even CTRL, so it won’t be triggered).

The F42 has no such option, so it’s always in the RMT group.

That means, to fully use all 3 groups, you need:
– one F58 flash on the camera
– one or more F42/F58 flashes in the RMT group
– one or more F58 flashes in the RMT2 group

You can then set the ratio. 1:2:4 means that the F58 on the camera outputs 1/7th of the final flash exposure. The flash(es) in RMT group output twice the power or 2/7ths of the final flash exposure, while the flash(es) in the RMT2 group output four times the power (or 4/7ths of the final flash exposure.)

You can also set any group to “-” which means that group does not show in the final flash exposure. This is very useful for the CTRL group, on the camera! So we don’t get the wireless flash signal in the picture, like we used to, when we used the pop-up flash!


Here’s an example – a F42 was placed on the camera left and set to 24mm zoom, while the F58 was on camera and I pointed the flash head towards the camera left. The ratio was set to -:1:1 so that the on-camera F58 didn’t add to the final shot. Thanks to Ronnie of Furniture for being in this final shot, too!


This is another example with the same setup – the bassist in the back was always in the dark, so it was nice to have a flash hit him, what more from this angle. Note the flash from the left, on the guitarist/vocalist Ezam of Stoned Revivals.


Yet another example – the F42 was placed on a car. Thanks to Rames for posing! He has also posted his version here.

As you can see, it can push enough wireless power in such sunny times where the pop-up flash might not send a strong enough wireless signal. F22 ISO200 1/200s means it was a Sunny F16… plus 1!

Now there is one sucky thing – you can’t trigger your good ol’ F36 and F56 flashes with this new technology. If you’ve seen the wireless ratio pre-flash signal, you’ll see that it’s longer and very different from the pop-up flash wireless signal. So the F36 and F56 won’t recognize this.

No wait, there are two sucky things – you can’t use this 3 Group Mode unless you have a Sony Alpha 700 or Sony Alpha 900! When I activate this mode and mount it on an Sony Alpha 200, it switches to RMT mode automatically.

Sony, please come up with a firmware fix that will allow the Sony Alpha 200/300/350 to use this wonderful wireless ratio flash technology. Who knows how many A200/A300/A350 owners have bought a F58 expecting it to work wireless control effortlessly?

And what about the photographers who have amassed a few F36 and F56 flashes for studio work?

Fortunately, there is the second mode;

CTRL2 = CTRL = 2 Group Mode

Again, one group is the CTRL group, on the camera. However, this mode can trigger the F36, F56, F42 and F58!

All good, except that it only works on the Sony Alpha 900! I can turn this mode on, but when I mount it on a Sony Alpha 700 or A200 it changes to RMT mode.

Sony, please come up with a firmware fix that extends this CTRL2 mode to the Alpha 200/300/350/700 as well!

So now I can’t trigger my F56 using my F58 on the Sony Alpha 700. That’s why I swapped my F56 with KJ’s F42 for the time being.

Quick Notes

If you have an A200 and buy an F58, you get Quick Shift Bounce but you cannot mount the F58 to trigger other F42/F58 flashes.

If you have an A700 and buy an F58, you get Quick Shift Bounce and can mount the F58 to trigger F42/F58 flashes in CTRL+ mode. You cannot use CTRL mode to trigger the F36/F56.

Both the A200 and A700 can use the pop-up flash to wirelessly control the F58 if it is set to RMT or RMT2 mode.

The A900 can use the F58 to control the F36/F56 in CTRL mode.

So which has more mileage?
1) A900 + F58 + F56
2) A700 + F58 + F56

1) lets the F58 mount while triggering the F56 off camera. But you cannot remove the F58 as you won’t be able to trigger the F56 (or the off-camera F58!)

2) To use both in a similiar fashion to 1), you are forced to put the F58 on a flash bracket (which is not so cool because you’ll shoot portraits with the body shutter downwards, since the F58 will be on the left) and trigger it wirelessly.

However, you can use the A700’s pop-up flash to trigger both F56 and F58 in off-camera positions. Which means more moveable wireless lights than option 1).

If you have a bunch of F36, F42 and F56 flashes lying around, there are 2 ways to get them all to trigger off-camera:
1) A900 + F58 in CTRL mode and possibly flashes in manual power for ratio control
2) A700 with pop-up wireless flash and possibly flashes in manual power for ratio control

More Bad News

The F58 is not dust, weather or splash resistant and it says so specifically in the manual.

The F58 foot is fully plastic. That is cause for concern for some people though not me.

There’s nothing about radio or WiFi or Bluetooth or that other Sony proximity network technology being implemented, not at least in the manual.

My Minolta Dynax 7 cannot even trigger the F58 wirelessly as a plain remote slave. It doesn’t let me use the 3 Group Mode or 2 Group Mode, either! So it’s not one of the “supported cameras” suggested in the F58 manual (obviously printed when the Sony Alpha 900 name was still a supposed secret.)

The F58 does not automatically pick a wider angle when in portrait mode and the flash is pointing forwards but rotated 90 degrees. Hence you get a dark stripe, and the manual warns you to pull out the wide panel.

And now, for some F58 manual captures!



The “cameras without built-in flash” and “Supported camera” obviously refers to the Sony Alpha 900, not to be named at the time the manual was printed.

Best Combinations

The best combination to get for maximum wireless control, would be a Sony Alpha 700 with 2 F58 flashes and 1 F42 flash.

You could have 1 F58 on the camera, controlling the F42 and F58 in 3 Group Mode. So, 2 independent lights you can place anywhere, plus you can control the ratio from the F58 on camera.

You could use the pop-up flash to trigger all 3 flashes wirelessly. So, 3 independent lights you can place anywhere… though you’ll need to set power manually on 2 of the 3 flashes if the light ratios are intended to be different.

The Sony Alpha 900 is limited to the first scenario since it doesn’t have a pop-up flash.

Good News

The full power recharge is INSANE. I shoot mostly mixed bounce ambient stuff so I very rarely hit the 1/1 power limit… so I wouldn’t appreciate this. However, if you do, 4-5 seconds to recharge a full blast is amazing. And that’s not even including the Sony FA-EB1AM external battery pack, which makes the recharge speed even faster (well I don’t know how fast, I don’t have or need one.)

The complex interface gets slowly less complex in the span of a day’s use I guess.

You can also use the new rotation methods to add effects, like so:


Flash zoomed to 105mm and rolled 45 degrees clockwise. I think it was also yawed up a bit. This gave that thin blue stripe you see in the picture! I couldn’t flash the drums at a full 90 degree clockwise turn; the drums nearer to me would get overexposed. At the same time, the drummer had a very strong light on him so I tried to avoid the flash beam from hitting him.

More reading here:
Sony HVL-F58AM pre-production hands-on!
Newsflash: New Flash!
Alphastrobist

Oh, and there’s a new firmware update for the Sony Alpha 700, version 4, which allows High ISO Noise Reduction to be turned off, enhances image quality, and enables 3-frame bracketing at 2 EV stops. Nothing about supporting 2 Group Mode, sadly.

Flash Video About A Flash

If I was a bit more free I’d post the technical review of the Sony HVL-F58AM “Cobra” flash that I just bought… but for now, here’s a video featuring Sony’s superbly-designed flagship flash with its unique Quick Shift Bounce.

Inspired by those TV “celebrity” sessions we have a transcript of the video!

Me: This is full power, 17mm.

Er… yeah, full power.

We’re gonna test how long it takes to recharge full power.

We wait for the light to come on… okay… waiting… waiting… still charging.

(0:25s, flash is fired)

Waiting… waiting… still charging.

(0:34s, ready light comes on 9 seconds later)

Okay now we try the F58.

*removed batteries from F56 to put in F58*

Muazam: Hohoho dang. racun racun!

Me: Okay. Full power.

Wait ah… okay now we try ah. But don’t look.

Silencers: Hahaha Albert looking still!

(1:08s, flash is fired.)
(1:13s, flash is fired 5 seconds later.)
(1:16s, flash is fired 3 seconds later at a lower power.)

Muazam: Fuh lagi cepat!

(1:18s, flash is fired 2 seconds later at a lower power.)

Silencers: Yeah yeah thanks to the shiny table la.

Muazam: Not full charge but it still can…

Ah you can still…

Full charge.

Okay okay let’s wait for the…

Ah see, it’s quite fast.

(Some bits I can’t make out.)

vandechrome: Okay okay or not.

Muazam: After youtube buy 58.

vandechrome: your opinion?

Alex: Very fast.

Very good.

Buy 58.

(End transcription.)

On a side note, Ewin recently Guessed That Lens correctly! Yes, it came from a Sony 55-200mm F4-5.6 DT. This is very much a Tamron 55-200mm F4-5.6 rebadge (the Sigma one doesn’t focus as close). This lens is pretty sharp, compact, and focuses to 95cm close! That’s closer than even the Minolta 70-210mm F4 “beercan” which does 110cm and the Minolta/Sony 70-200mm F2.8G SSM which does 120cm.

Ewin also has the 55-200mm. Go check out his blog, he has quite a few vibrant shots!


These, however, are from the Minolta 70-210mm F4 beercan. There is a difference in rendition of out-of-focus areas, and the greens get a lot more vivid.


There is a ‘fluffiness’ that is apparent here.


Thanks to Khai for letting me try his Sony 55-200mm F4-5.6 DT!