Re: GESO: Hasselblad vs Pentax lens "test"
Unfortunately you are correct. Sorry, this was less of an even test than I had wanted! I just went back to the original files and did a careful look. I was using Liveview as my focus aid for all three lenses. My intent was to focus on the old fallen tree behind the collected river debris, in front of the sand bar across the river. But both of the H lenses seem to have been focused somewhere mid river and the P lens was closer to my intended target. I returned the H lenses to my brother-in-law yesterday. So no chance for a slower paced more deliberate re-test. But if you have a source who would loan you an H lens or two, I would be glad to send you the H-to-645 adapter if you like. stan > On Dec 10, 2017, at 5:03 AM, Jostein wrote: > > Interesting, > How did you focus the The 150mm? The intruding branches above the water seems > very sharp indeed. > > Jostein > > Den 07.12.2017 20:04, skrev Stanley Halpin: >> So my father-in-law did a lot of photography and had a lot of gear. Many >> years ago I was visiting, I was doing some shots with my Pentax 645. He >> pulled out his Hasselblad and played with it a bit (but no shots.) I >> commented that I knew of an adapter would let me use his lenses on my >> camera. No comment from him. >> Fast forward to today. When father-in-law passed away 7 years ago, his >> camera gear was distributed, with my brother-in-law getting the Hasselblad >> set to complement his own H gear. >> I recently retrieved two of those lenses on a brief loan. >> The links below are to three shots. One each with Carl Zeiss 3.5/60mm, Carl >> Zeiss 4/150mm, and Pentax D-FA 24-70 @ 60. >> All shot from the same tripod position, at f/8, 1/60 or 1/90sec, ISO100. >> The Hasselblad (Zeiss) lenses were mounted on a Hasselblad-to-Pentax-645 >> adapter which in turn was mounted on a 645-to-K adapter on a K-1. >> I used two different K-1 bodies with slightly different settings so, to even >> things out, I used Lightroom to post process with Shady WB, Auto Tone. No >> sharpening. >> CZ 4/150 >> http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece7506 >> CZ 3.5/60 >> http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece7944 >> D-FA 24-70 @ 60mm >> http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece737d >> Note that you can scroll sideways from one to another, no need to use the >> individual links… >> I hope you enjoy this visual answer to a question you probably never thought >> to ask... >> stan -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.
Re: GESO: Hasselblad vs Pentax lens "test"
Interesting, How did you focus the The 150mm? The intruding branches above the water seems very sharp indeed. Jostein Den 07.12.2017 20:04, skrev Stanley Halpin: So my father-in-law did a lot of photography and had a lot of gear. Many years ago I was visiting, I was doing some shots with my Pentax 645. He pulled out his Hasselblad and played with it a bit (but no shots.) I commented that I knew of an adapter would let me use his lenses on my camera. No comment from him. Fast forward to today. When father-in-law passed away 7 years ago, his camera gear was distributed, with my brother-in-law getting the Hasselblad set to complement his own H gear. I recently retrieved two of those lenses on a brief loan. The links below are to three shots. One each with Carl Zeiss 3.5/60mm, Carl Zeiss 4/150mm, and Pentax D-FA 24-70 @ 60. All shot from the same tripod position, at f/8, 1/60 or 1/90sec, ISO100. The Hasselblad (Zeiss) lenses were mounted on a Hasselblad-to-Pentax-645 adapter which in turn was mounted on a 645-to-K adapter on a K-1. I used two different K-1 bodies with slightly different settings so, to even things out, I used Lightroom to post process with Shady WB, Auto Tone. No sharpening. CZ 4/150 http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece7506 CZ 3.5/60 http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece7944 D-FA 24-70 @ 60mm http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece737d Note that you can scroll sideways from one to another, no need to use the individual links… I hope you enjoy this visual answer to a question you probably never thought to ask... stan -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.
GESO: Hasselblad vs Pentax lens "test"
So my father-in-law did a lot of photography and had a lot of gear. Many years ago I was visiting, I was doing some shots with my Pentax 645. He pulled out his Hasselblad and played with it a bit (but no shots.) I commented that I knew of an adapter would let me use his lenses on my camera. No comment from him. Fast forward to today. When father-in-law passed away 7 years ago, his camera gear was distributed, with my brother-in-law getting the Hasselblad set to complement his own H gear. I recently retrieved two of those lenses on a brief loan. The links below are to three shots. One each with Carl Zeiss 3.5/60mm, Carl Zeiss 4/150mm, and Pentax D-FA 24-70 @ 60. All shot from the same tripod position, at f/8, 1/60 or 1/90sec, ISO100. The Hasselblad (Zeiss) lenses were mounted on a Hasselblad-to-Pentax-645 adapter which in turn was mounted on a 645-to-K adapter on a K-1. I used two different K-1 bodies with slightly different settings so, to even things out, I used Lightroom to post process with Shady WB, Auto Tone. No sharpening. CZ 4/150 http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece7506 CZ 3.5/60 http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece7944 D-FA 24-70 @ 60mm http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p566717840/e9ece737d Note that you can scroll sideways from one to another, no need to use the individual links… I hope you enjoy this visual answer to a question you probably never thought to ask... stan -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.