Learning the 85F1.2.....
Greetings: I have had this awesome lens for about 3 weeks now and I must say that it is the most challenging optic I have used! When shooting in the wider apertures, the DoF is so narrow that the old 'focus & recompose' trick often results in shots where the smallest movement has moved the in-focus plane away from the eyes (where I always try to focus with portraits!). Here are a few shots of my daughter Julia......trying to relearn to use various focus points on my 1D!! For anyone considering this lens, if you truly want THE BEST portrait lens, this is the one!! The colours and contrast are unbelievable as well as the incredible thin DoF you can achieve at f1.2. Thanks for looking and comments are always welcome!!
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/8000 sec
Aperture: 1.2
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Evaluative
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 200
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/3000 sec
Aperture: 1.8
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Evaluative
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 200
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/6000 sec
Aperture: 2.0
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Spot
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 200
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/6000 sec
Aperture: 1.4
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Spot
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 400
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/8000 sec
Aperture: 1.2
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Evaluative
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 200
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/3000 sec
Aperture: 1.8
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Evaluative
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 200
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/6000 sec
Aperture: 2.0
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Spot
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 200
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
Camera: Canon 1D
Shutter speed: 1/6000 sec
Aperture: 1.4
Exposure mode: Manual
Flash: Off
Metering mode: Spot
Drive mode: Single frame shooting
ISO: 400
Lens: 85.0 mm
Focal length: 85.0mm
AF mode: One-shot AF
0
Comments
Amazing color detail and clarity as well as compostion. I see that you have learned how to "handle" this challenging lens....I see quite an improvement from your first post of your loving subject. Even though your early most was great--these are wonderful.
Michal
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
Your shots are great. The owner of the studio I work for has this chunk of glass but rarely uses it for portraits. He uses the 28-70 f2.8 L mostly because of the versatility and speed of changing from 3/4 to full body. I have seen some commercial work he has done with the 1.2 lens and nothing compares to it. I use the 85 1.8 for my portrait work, and I have found it to be tonally cold. As with most lenses it really sharpens up 1/2 a stop from wide open. I am accustomed to shooting portraits with an 150mm f4 Hasselblad lens, and I wanted to try to achieve the seperation this lens gives at f8 with my 20D, I have found that f5.6 or so is needed on the 85 1.8 for equivalent seperation, and the bokeh is good but not suprisingly, as smooth as the Zeiss glass. 5.6 I have found can exceed the 1/250 sync speed, and stopping down gives the appearance that the subjects were chromakeyed on the background. I'm experimenting with ND filters to correct this. Here are some samples with the 85mm f1.8.
Date Taken:2005-05-07 11:47:01Date Modified:2005-05-16 16:31:12Make:CanonModel: Canon EOS 20D Size: 1940x2910 Bytes: 606775 Aperture: f/2.5 ISO: 100 Focal Length: 85mm Exposure Time: 0.02s (1/50)
Date Taken:2005-04-27 15:17:04Date Modified:2005-04-28 01:32:03Make:CanonModel: Canon EOS 20D Size: 3504x2336 Bytes: 1894237 Aperture: f/9.0 ISO: 100 Focal Length: 85mm Exposure Time: 0.004s (1/250)
the chroma-key effect
Date Taken:2005-06-30 16:38:21Date Modified:2005-07-01 17:32:05Make:CanonModel: Canon EOS 20D Size: 1780x2670 Bytes: 623648 Aperture: f/2.8 ISO: 400 Focal Length: 85mm Exposure Time: 0.004s (1/250)Flash:Flash fired, compulsory flash modeExposure Program:Aperture priorityExposure Bias:-0.33ColorSpace:sRGB
crushing the backgroundpretty well at f2.8
Maybe some day I will be able to afford the 85L, but untill then I love my 1.8
I don't think you could ask for a much more adorable model than Julia. I love the bright vibrant colors in the first shot and the mischievous pose in the third. You really know how to use that lens to it's potential.
Nick
SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto