One thing that needs to be evaluated in a "real world" test would be performance on a fast focus rack. Bonus points if you compare ease of use with a remote focus ;)
Really the only downside to stills glass is the mechanics.
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One thing that needs to be evaluated in a "real world" test would be performance on a fast focus rack. Bonus points if you compare ease of use with a remote focus ;)
Really the only downside to stills glass is the mechanics.
Point taken. That's why there needs to be a variety of sets for the test. For my work I don't do action / narrative follow focus but understand many others do. Wonder if a real smart facial recognition or programed auto focus feature would work for most reality / steady cam style productions. Seems like a missed opportunity to have a Canon lens on a camera without using the very fast auto focus mech. Maybe with a soft landing to/from the subject to avoid obvious focus hunting.
Before you climb all over me and say "real men never would use auto focus" . . . gotta say, the times where a close proximity narrative is in sharp focus in most features or TV is amazingly low. Call it art or call it just a real hard task to do well there is a bunch o soft images thrown up on screen. As history illustrates: most anything we do today mechanical / physically will be replaced by software and technology in the future. Focus pullers heed this and continue your professional development in other areas.
That might be the problem with a test like this . . . who really wants to know that a $1500, 1lb Japanese consumer lens is 90% as good as a $20K, 10lb man-unit. In most music videos does sharpness really matter? Sometimes it's what looks cooler on set and makes you feel like a rockstar DP that drives the equipment decision. For me, I own, travel, carry, set-up and maintain my own gear. I have no one to impress so small, cheap and light is the key as long as image quality does not suffer.
The best tripod, lens or contraceptive is the one you have with you when you really need it. The one that fits in your wallet is most times the best to own . . .
When I read the title I thought - I've got a set of PL Elites... Then I realized they meant generically "High end Elite PL Lenses" anyway....
Canon makes some great stills lenses, many people hold them as being the best for stills work. If that's what you've got available they won't prevent you from making great images. There are some clever cheats that make them not so bad for motion work. Amazing work has been and continues to be done with ridiculously sub par equipment don't let any of this stop you. Good piano, bad piano did not change stop or slow Thelonious.
That being said - if you are working on a high stakes production it generally does not make sense to mess around with improvised lens solutions. Motion picture lenses are built to shoot movies the way race cars are built to win races, specialized, precise and at a cost that civilians find to be a bit crisp, but make sense to those that need them to do what they do. Every picture you make on set needs to go through that lens....
Auto Focus ? It's gonna be a little while before it's suitable for narrative filming... Might be a great way to pull off a shot now and then, when you'll let a computer cut your hair it's probably time to let it pull focus. Someday.
I'd be glad to participate in a test in San Diego, If I'm avail. Bring some fancy glass and some cool ghetto glass too.
Matt Uhry
www.mattuhry.com
We would be very honored to have you attend the testing. I follow your threads closely - always learn something. Would love an updated opinion (from 2009 SALT) on high quality zooms for Epic:
http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthr...-Lens-for-Epic
Well having organized the original Salt test I guess I should chime in. Most modern lenses are sharp enough to produce good looking images on an Epic, at least in the center, especially stopped down. Where things start to become complicated (and expensive) is when they need to be good even in the corners and wide open or close to it. However Matt is right, it's really not optical performance that truly sets apart high end cinema lenses (my leica M lenses are sharper than my Optimos) it's mechanical accuracy, repeatability and the lack of optical abberations specific to cinema (breathing, ramping and image shift). These aspects are why cinema lenses command thier premium prices.
Now this next comment is going to start a bit of a religious war but I agree with Jim, that even among still lenses the Canon L wides, zooms and even the 70-200 2.8 are not the creme de la creme (the 70-200 f4 is quite good though). They are totally servicable as is proved by many professional photographers that rely on them, but compared to Leica M/R, some Zeiss ZEs and the new Nikon G series lenses they are at the back of the pack. This is even evidenced by the number of Canon shooters who use the 14-24 Nikkor with an adapter on thier EOS bodies.
I'd be glad to help you with your test but do not put too much hope in L glass trouncing the cinema or even the other still glass that's brought to compare. In the end there will be more similarity than not but at the edges of optical performance every little thing counts.
JIHAD!!! Death to Canon Haters!!
Would be honored to have your assistance!
Put it this way, CANON GLASS will win because its cheap!!!! super cheap!
A canon 85mm F1.2 @$1550 Vs a $18,500 85mm 1.3 Master prime....
Line them up side by as we have done... you cannot see the difference at all with your eye....
Wide angles yes, 24mm upwards .... nothing in it.
One is built like a tank!!!, weighs a ton! and you can pull focus with it properly.. the other is exactly the same quality image but is made light !! and built like a Mazda !
Price will always win the race in a majority opinion..... It's just human nature...
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