The Fisheye Thread
Fisheye Lenses are fun, and super wide. They offer up many creative possibilities!
1Ds Mark II, Canon 15mm Fisheye:
Contrary to popular belief, if you hold the camera straight, you *can* also get a level horizon and straight lines. No "de-fishing" on this photo. This on 1Ds Mark II, and Canon 15mm Fisheye:
So let's discuss Fisheye Lenses, and the creative possibilities they afford us as photographers :ear Share your experiences, and photos!
1Ds Mark II, Canon 15mm Fisheye:
Contrary to popular belief, if you hold the camera straight, you *can* also get a level horizon and straight lines. No "de-fishing" on this photo. This on 1Ds Mark II, and Canon 15mm Fisheye:
So let's discuss Fisheye Lenses, and the creative possibilities they afford us as photographers :ear Share your experiences, and photos!
0
Comments
Fred
http://www.facebook.com/Riverbendphotos
what is the effect like on a crop camera. I have often wondered. The 10-22mm is obviously similar at 10mm but is not fisheye. Do you still have a crop body to show an example, or is it as simple as croping the outside egde of the shot?
Cheers
Stan
http://www.pbase.com/image/28415517
http://www.pbase.com/cameras/canon/ef_15_28
Portfolio • Workshops • Facebook • Twitter
These shots are cropped a bit, but not straightened.
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
I was honored by our very own Michiel de Brieder to use his 8mm fisheye (Made in Belorussia, right, Michiel?) on our post-shootout trip a few times.
Here's a couple of shots I quickly PP-ed and uploaded just now:
01: Natural Bridges, Bluff, UT:
02: Double Arch, Arches NP, UT:
I didn't do any cropping, sorry, just a minor color touch-up.
I used my (1.6 crop) Canon 30D.
I remember Jack also tried it on his FF 5D, so he might come out with better versions of the same locations:-)
Anyway - it's a fun lens, and I'm planning on getting one, at least eventually...
Waxy, I remember the original post of this, no.3 is awesome
Nikolai 8mm is awesome.
The 10-22mm does this at 10mm
or the Fish shot of his kids which I love, great comedy.
I will post later but Smugmug is running slow this evening
Cheers
Stan
All thanks to Michiel, it's his lens and his kind Dutch heart that let me use it It sure does... That's why you need S*... errr, some 3d party uploader
As for a thought on the possibilities with the 15mm fisheye. Well, I have been using it with my 1DMII so factor in that 1.3x crop and I still get an effective 20mm view (approx). Truly however, a full-frame sensor with the 15mm will be a fantastic and fun adventure, especially with dramatic foregrounds that bring the picture right to you.
Add in the sharpness (even around the edges) and the real lack of light falloff that you would get with the 16-35 or the 17-40 around those edges and boom! You've got a great advantage in wideangle goodness!
Personally, my wildflower photography, and seascape work is my favorite times to use the 15mm fisheye since rocks, waves and flowers really lead you into the picture! All in all, when used sparingly, and creatively, this lens is one that I recommend for every Canon user, even with the 1.6x crop!
Master Of Sushi Noms
Amateur CSS Dork
Please tell me this picture was so not taken this year, was it?
I was told there is no poppies in the Reserver, so I didn't go..
Please tell me I didn't miss it :bash
PS.
You *do* have quite a glass collection
Hey oh master sith of glass! If you want, I will lie and tell you that it wasnt from this year . But yeah, actually it was. That shot was taken as I sat right next to the Guru, Mr. Lepp over at 195th street North of Lancaster this spring. The preserve and the Gorman hills were barren this spring, but the foothills just to the north had some wonderful displays. Of course, the lack of rain we recieved here in SoCal this winter really played a hand in most of that disappointment, but the Central coast was amazing this year (if you could be brave enough to hit the muddy dirt roads in Carrizo plain, avoid the eleventy-billion ticks, and all the poison oak)
As for the burgeoning lens collection, I would trade it all in for a nice digital back Hassleblad H2D-39 if only B&H would be nice to me :photo
Master Of Sushi Noms
Amateur CSS Dork
Andy: I'm really impressed by how you didn't manage to get that barrel distortion. Thanks for sharing that. I had no idea.
Now I must wait to shovel up money to get one.
Chris
Detroit Wedding Photography Blog
Canon 10D | 20D | 5D
Are the Russian lenses really any competition for a manufacturer lens?
Zenitar 15mm, f2.8
http://www.rugift.com/photocameras/zenitar-fisheye-canon-eos.htm
Peleng 8mm, f3.5
http://www.rugift.com/photocameras/peleng_fisheye_lens_for_canon_eos.htm
Are there any lenses to stay away from? (Either quality or physical fit)
How about accessory lenses with the fisheye perspective?
Has anyone done a simulated fisheye with stitched images and software?
Thanks,
ziggy53
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
Even though I dont like it in action photos I love fisheyes in architectural photos, the way it bends the photos is really cool and it definitely gives it a cool effect.
Marko
Setup: One camera, one lens, and one roll of film.
And of course, who can resist a funny animal photo with a fisheye lens
Master Of Sushi Noms
Amateur CSS Dork
Setup: One camera, one lens, and one roll of film.
10-22 @ 10mm
10-22 @ 17mm (or maybe it was the 17-85 )
Also works great in construction and real estate! 10-22 @ 10mm
10-22 @ 10mm
- Kevin
Kevin
The Canon 10-22mm is an "Ultra-Wide" or "Super-Wide" lens, but it is "rectilinear" meaning that the field of curvature is well controlled. It does have some barrel distortion used at the widest angle of view, so it still needs to be used carefully or corrected in software.
http://www.photo.net/learn/fov/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rectilinear
Ziggy53
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
I thought fisheyes had 180 degrees for angle of view?
Either way I want one bad. I'm thinking about selling my 85 1.8 to go towards one since it currently is my least used lens.
I was never happy with a 15mm diagonal fish (Canon or Sigma) since it really didn't give the effect I wanted.
HOWEVER, I use a 8mm Sigma fisheye with a Kenko 1.4 DG Pro TC. This gives me the perfect effect that I'm looking for.
I'll post pix later.
Thanks Ziggy!
- Kevin
Allow me to add a n00b question to yours... just ordered my 20d, but am looking at lenses already. With the 1.6 crop factor, what length lens will behave as a fish-eye? I would have thought it would have to be under 10mm, but looks like I am wrong.
Jamie
To behave as a fish-eye the lens gotta be... a fish-eye lens...
While it's true that fish-eye lenses are wide, from this very thread you can see that there is 15mm fish-eye and 10mm non-fish-eye lense, for instance.
The small focal length alone does not make a lens a fish-eye one, it also has to be constructed in a certain way.
One thing a crop factor of the body does is that it trims the usual fish-eye circle, just as you can see in my two non-cropped pictures in the beginning of this thread. On a FF (full-frame) camera (e.g. 5D) you would get a complete circle.
HTH
A fisheye lens is a special effect lens, not corrected for curvilinear distortion. A "regular" wide-angle lens is normally designed to reduce the effects of curvilinear distortion, and it is called a "rectilinear" lens.
Our eyes and brain perceive the world without much curvilinear distortion, so we normally expect to see images that way. When we see curved lines in an image, it usually looks funny if we were expecting straight lines.
The effect is similar to looking at the reflection in a spherical mirror or Christmas tree ornament. (Not my image. Used for instructional only.)
Can you simulate the effect in software? I'm glad you asked.
Here is an image I created months ago. It's a 100% crop of a lens test at 200mm. It's from a Canon "L" lens, and I guarantee has almost no curvilinear distortion.
It does have rather strong, straight lines, so it's a pretty good candidate for the treatment.
Here's how it looks after processing:
It's soft in the middle, but that's because many pixels had to be interpolated, and I only started with a VGA resolution image. Using a normal image, full resolution, it would look authentically "fisheye".
ziggy53
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
jamie
..with what Ziggy said, I'd like to note that since the fish-eye lenses are *usually* wider and often provide almost 180 degrees FOV (Field Of View), a software can only simulate the real thing to a degree.
HTH
http://www.joeywashburn.com/gallery/1603981/1/77986275
http://www.joeywashburn.com/gallery/1603981/1/77986554
The scond one is my favorite
www.joeywashburn.com
Blog
http://redbull.smugmug.com
"Money can't buy happiness...But it can buy expensive posessions that make other people envious, and that feels just as good.":D
Canon 20D, Canon 50 1.8 II, Canon 70-200 f/4L, Canon 17-40 f/4 L, Canon 100mm 2.8 Macro, Canon 430ex.
Setup: One camera, one lens, and one roll of film.
http://redbull.smugmug.com
"Money can't buy happiness...But it can buy expensive posessions that make other people envious, and that feels just as good.":D
Canon 20D, Canon 50 1.8 II, Canon 70-200 f/4L, Canon 17-40 f/4 L, Canon 100mm 2.8 Macro, Canon 430ex.