Liam Kennedy
May 18th, 2004, 10:46 PM
I have been covering a number of events recently where the wide-angle came in very handy for some tight spaces with capturing some interviews. In one event I was also capturing some zoomed in shots of a speaker in an auditorium. Initial framing test showed that I did not need to remove the wide-angle in order to improve the composition... so I left it on.
As I was capturing the shots I found myself squinting at the LCD display and also in the viewfinder as the image appeared to be a little "soft". I moved it through focus and back again... and decided that I probably just needed better glasses (I have had perfect vision until I noticed the need for glasses on close-up work a couple of months ago).
I was also capturing the event with a VX2000 without a wideangle lens.
The VX2000 footage is great quality... very sharp image... but the PD170 stuff is all soft (not exactly out of focus but just a pretty rough image). I basically have to write-off all the close-up shots captured on the PD170.
So... what I am kicking myself for is that now I think about why this happens it seems pretty obvious. You should use a wide-angle lens for what it was designed for... and if you find yourself using the full zoom then you should remove the lens and go back to the default.
So... if anyone else can learn from my mistake.. I hope this post helps.
As I was capturing the shots I found myself squinting at the LCD display and also in the viewfinder as the image appeared to be a little "soft". I moved it through focus and back again... and decided that I probably just needed better glasses (I have had perfect vision until I noticed the need for glasses on close-up work a couple of months ago).
I was also capturing the event with a VX2000 without a wideangle lens.
The VX2000 footage is great quality... very sharp image... but the PD170 stuff is all soft (not exactly out of focus but just a pretty rough image). I basically have to write-off all the close-up shots captured on the PD170.
So... what I am kicking myself for is that now I think about why this happens it seems pretty obvious. You should use a wide-angle lens for what it was designed for... and if you find yourself using the full zoom then you should remove the lens and go back to the default.
So... if anyone else can learn from my mistake.. I hope this post helps.