Alex Manning
January 8th, 2009, 07:55 PM
Hello fellow DVI gals and pals. I come to you today with a problem, one that I was hoping some of you could clear up for me. I am a proud new owner of a Canon XH-A1! I adore the camera itself, the customization, the professional build quality, and the image it produces. However, beneath my overflowing abundance of joy and excitement there lies a problem, one that I feel may only be mended by that which I do not possess - the American dollar.
Here we go...I am planning to use my camera in a student production. In the majority of shots, a shallow depth of field is needed. Unfortunately, the stock camera can only loosely provide this. "I'll just use a 35mm adaptor that will fit on a 72mm lens." I said. Well, that's just the problem. I have a friend who bought the parts for one over the internet, finished construction, and now uses it on his Panasonic 100B (Also 72mm), which is not High Definition. When placing it on the lens of his camera and looking through the display...he can see the adapter "ring" or outline (there is a term but I've forgotten it). He then zooms in until it cannot be seen seen, and adjusts accordingly. First Question: Do you have to follow this procedure with all 35mm adapters?
Trying the same adapter on my XH-A1 looked good at first, that is, until I tired to zoom in to prevent the "ring" to be seen. Everything got blurry and out of focus and after an hour of messing with the adapter and focus ring i was still not able to produce a focused picture.
The adapter is slightly makeshift - It isn't a Brevis35 or SGpro. The lens itself is a Nikkor 50mm 1:14 lens. The "adapter" to fit it onto a 72mm lens is a DKE 52mm Spacer Ring - it also has MACRO + 10 written on the side.
In order to get that "film" quality look I need this thing to work. If someone has a solution to this, I will forever be in their gratitude. Thank you so much, and thanks for listening.
Here we go...I am planning to use my camera in a student production. In the majority of shots, a shallow depth of field is needed. Unfortunately, the stock camera can only loosely provide this. "I'll just use a 35mm adaptor that will fit on a 72mm lens." I said. Well, that's just the problem. I have a friend who bought the parts for one over the internet, finished construction, and now uses it on his Panasonic 100B (Also 72mm), which is not High Definition. When placing it on the lens of his camera and looking through the display...he can see the adapter "ring" or outline (there is a term but I've forgotten it). He then zooms in until it cannot be seen seen, and adjusts accordingly. First Question: Do you have to follow this procedure with all 35mm adapters?
Trying the same adapter on my XH-A1 looked good at first, that is, until I tired to zoom in to prevent the "ring" to be seen. Everything got blurry and out of focus and after an hour of messing with the adapter and focus ring i was still not able to produce a focused picture.
The adapter is slightly makeshift - It isn't a Brevis35 or SGpro. The lens itself is a Nikkor 50mm 1:14 lens. The "adapter" to fit it onto a 72mm lens is a DKE 52mm Spacer Ring - it also has MACRO + 10 written on the side.
In order to get that "film" quality look I need this thing to work. If someone has a solution to this, I will forever be in their gratitude. Thank you so much, and thanks for listening.