I used to prefer door off for shooting, or at least no window. If shooting through plexiglass window, remember a polar filter will give problems with (rainbow) stress patterns. Enjoy your flight.
The TC 201 will not accept all Nikon fit lenses. A. The lens must have rather deep recessed back elements, or they will touch the protruding front elements of the converter. This of course prevents the lens from being attached to the converter.It's all in the design of the two items, they must be compatible.
Got my first SLR, a Nikon F in 1959, to take the workload from my Leica 111c and an Argus C. Rolleiflex, Hasselblads, MPP 5x4 and Sinar 5x4 came later, (as the money rolled in). Supposedly retired now, and the Argus is the only one I have do not have.
Thanks for that information 'Snowbear' I am very new on this site, and as I was busy on Photoshop yesterday, I kept getting an interuption that another post had been made on a particular thread that I had contributed to.
How do I stop emails informing me that an addition has been made to the thread I have contributed to. ? I have un-ticked the ... Watch this Topic .. box.
From Physics school days (63 years ago) I seem to remember the formula 32 feet per second per second Rate of acceleration of a falling object. Of course, that is in the UK, over in the USA, it might be different.
Here in England there used to be a proviso that ...Photographs for legal purposes were to be shot on film (digital was not accepted). Digital is now accepted, perhaps because the police shoot digital images for their record purposes. I retired from professional photography a few years ago, but have one on-going set of pictures shot recently on raw, memory card retained till the case is settled. The legal people have had prints and Emailed files from me.
I would be interested if it was f 2.8 throughout.
DK wrote:
DK wrote:
Pablo8 wrote:
DK wrote:
Philipschmitten wrote:
Can power lines be removed in ELEMENTS? I have that but not PhotoShop. Thanks for your input.
Philip from Good Ole Texas
I've always thought someone should invent a camera filter for power lines. Just screw it on the lens, look through the viewfinder and the power lines are gone. Anybody up for the challenge?
They have, it's called a 'lens cap'.
Oops, never got my message on before and it mysteriously sent it. But with the lens cap on, how do you take photos?
quote=DK quote=Pablo8 quote=DK quote=Philipsch... (
show quote)
I just thought you wanted something to prevent seeing the power lines through the camera. Lol.
DK wrote:
Philipschmitten wrote:
Can power lines be removed in ELEMENTS? I have that but not PhotoShop. Thanks for your input.
Philip from Good Ole Texas
I've always thought someone should invent a camera filter for power lines. Just screw it on the lens, look through the viewfinder and the power lines are gone. Anybody up for the challenge?
They have, it's called a 'lens cap'.
They have, it's called a lens cap.
I have a Leica 111c (1940's) still in working order. and lenses 28mm; 35mm:50mm:73mm: 90mm: and 135mm. The comparative high price must be still down to QUALITY. One has only to handle a Leica, to appreciate the build quality and clarity of their lenses. Might be slow to use, in comparison to todays auto everything digital cameras, but still a pleasure to listen to the whisper quiet of the shutter and film transport.