Charles Papert |
September 3rd, 2009 12:29 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yang Wen
(Post 1301985)
who amongst us will be able to use these cine lenses with custom made mounts from panavision?
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Well, me, for instance, as I detailed earlier in this thread. I also described why this has interesting ramifications for those of us who work with these lenses to begin with. OK, I'm certainly in the minority on this board, however I think that the point is not specifically about Panavision lenses but that 35mm cine lenses in general can now be used on a DSLR without cropping issues. For anyone who has a RED or 35mm adaptor and PL mount lenses, a demographic that is well-represented on this board, this should mean that with appropriate mount they can use their lenses on this camera as an adjunct to their primary camera body, if desired. What I haven't heard yet is if there will be any restrictions on certain lenses due to the placement of the mirror--we weren't able to use the Primo primes wider than 35mm on the 5DMKII, for instance.
The 11-1 (24-275) Primo zoom shown in the pictures is the standard workhorse and nearly every production I've been on carries one; for most shows where we "live" on the zooms, this will sit on the B camera while the A camera uses the 4-1 (17.5-75mm). Generally the 3-1 (135-420) is day-played as needed. It is indeed massive, its nickname is "the Hubble", but in the world of 35mm cine lenses, you needed a lot of optics to deliver the results that are expected. 420mm is actually not even that impressively telephoto; it's roughly equivalent to the long end of the XH-A1's built-in zoom!
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