Douglas Underdahl
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Okay, here goes . . .
When I put the very first PL mount on the famous Peleng 8mm lens, I would get phone calls asking me if you could use it with a super 16 camera, and what would the lens turn into, or act like - a 12mm? a 16mm?
I would explain that the lens is ALWAYS AN 8MM LENS, IT DOESN'T TURN INTO ANOTHER FOCAL LENGHT OR ACT LIKE A DIFFERENT LENS.
This was usually met with silence on the other end of the line. This happened again and again, so I finally posted a photo taken with the 8mm and then showed the different formats you could use the lens for, as frames. I think this helped, and I will try to dig it out but I don't sell the converted lens anymore so it's gone from my website.
Anyhow, here's what works much better: the "normal" lens for any given format. Now I know that David Mullen doesn't like the idea of a normal lens, and I respect that. But for purposes of figuring out what is a normal, wide, and telephoto lens for the format you are using, I think it's very useful and eliminates this notion that a lens turns into another lens or acts like another lens, which is just a bad way of communicating.
So, here goes:
A normal (not wide, not telephoto) lens for
16mm and 2/3" video is about 16mm
3k RED about 25mm
4k RED and most 35mm formats about 35mm
X35 about 40mm
still aka full frame 35 aka Vistavision about 50mm
If you can remember the above, then you will know that on X35, a 25mm is a wide angle. But on 3K it's more of a normal. On 16mm it's a bit telephoto, but not much: good for shooting close-ups of actors because it flattens faces instead of making them look bloated, as you would get if you used, say, a 12mm lens but moved the camera closer.
Now why do I say 50mm is normal for full frame/still 35? Probably it's more like 65 or 75mm but that's the lens that you get when you buy an old Nikon still camera, or most other still cameras. They come with that 50mm.
Also, you just MIGHT NOT LIKE these numbers. You might decide that 25mm is more of a normal focal length with RED 4k or especially RED 4k HD which is a bit smaller. You just might like the look of the 25mm as a normal lens, and shoot most of your dramatic feature with it. Or you might feel that 40mm is more "normal". That's up to you. Different focal lengths have different feels, and so your normal might be someone else's wide angle.
But if you can remember the the numbers in bold above, or your version of it, then you won't go down the wrongheaded path of thinking that a 50mm becomes a 75mm when you go from a larger format to a smaller one, which I think is a bad way to operate.
When I put the very first PL mount on the famous Peleng 8mm lens, I would get phone calls asking me if you could use it with a super 16 camera, and what would the lens turn into, or act like - a 12mm? a 16mm?
I would explain that the lens is ALWAYS AN 8MM LENS, IT DOESN'T TURN INTO ANOTHER FOCAL LENGHT OR ACT LIKE A DIFFERENT LENS.
This was usually met with silence on the other end of the line. This happened again and again, so I finally posted a photo taken with the 8mm and then showed the different formats you could use the lens for, as frames. I think this helped, and I will try to dig it out but I don't sell the converted lens anymore so it's gone from my website.
Anyhow, here's what works much better: the "normal" lens for any given format. Now I know that David Mullen doesn't like the idea of a normal lens, and I respect that. But for purposes of figuring out what is a normal, wide, and telephoto lens for the format you are using, I think it's very useful and eliminates this notion that a lens turns into another lens or acts like another lens, which is just a bad way of communicating.
So, here goes:
A normal (not wide, not telephoto) lens for
16mm and 2/3" video is about 16mm
3k RED about 25mm
4k RED and most 35mm formats about 35mm
X35 about 40mm
still aka full frame 35 aka Vistavision about 50mm
If you can remember the above, then you will know that on X35, a 25mm is a wide angle. But on 3K it's more of a normal. On 16mm it's a bit telephoto, but not much: good for shooting close-ups of actors because it flattens faces instead of making them look bloated, as you would get if you used, say, a 12mm lens but moved the camera closer.
Now why do I say 50mm is normal for full frame/still 35? Probably it's more like 65 or 75mm but that's the lens that you get when you buy an old Nikon still camera, or most other still cameras. They come with that 50mm.
Also, you just MIGHT NOT LIKE these numbers. You might decide that 25mm is more of a normal focal length with RED 4k or especially RED 4k HD which is a bit smaller. You just might like the look of the 25mm as a normal lens, and shoot most of your dramatic feature with it. Or you might feel that 40mm is more "normal". That's up to you. Different focal lengths have different feels, and so your normal might be someone else's wide angle.
But if you can remember the the numbers in bold above, or your version of it, then you won't go down the wrongheaded path of thinking that a 50mm becomes a 75mm when you go from a larger format to a smaller one, which I think is a bad way to operate.