mike_clinard1 Posted April 28, 2004 Posted April 28, 2004 I am about to start a 24 shot project shooting a roll slide film and want to use "My World Up Close" as a theme. I do not get to see the processed film until after completion, as it is turned in unprocessed. My problem is how good of close-ups can I make with my existing equipment or what are my best lens options using; EOS 3 body, 17-40 f4L, 70-200 f4L, 100-400 L, 25mm extender tube, tripod, & shutter release cable. I realize none of these are macro lens, but I want to use what I have and only have one shot at this project. I am open to purchasing a set of close-up diopter filters (67mm or 77mm), but which lens will give me the best macro? Thanks in advance for your ideas.
kelly_flanigan1 Posted April 29, 2004 Posted April 29, 2004 An enlarging lens; paper tubes; is what I used with my Exakta; long ago......These lenses are corrected for close ratios. It is worth a try today; if you have an enlarging lens.
aaron_lam Posted April 29, 2004 Posted April 29, 2004 I think if you use the 17-40 f4 and the 25mm tube.. you will get close to 1:1 ratio. I think there is a chart somewhere (and it might have come with the 25mm) that tells you what each match can give you. You can get pretty close to 1:1 and remain further away with the 70-200 (You have to be right up to the subject with that 17-40). I think both lenes will yield similar quality (not as good as a true macro but pretty close considering both great lenses). Just try it out. I have gotten pretty good macros with just using the extension ring. Of course use tripod, release cable, and mirror lock up. What about renting a 100mm macro? aaron
yakim_peled1 Posted April 29, 2004 Posted April 29, 2004 Many 70-200/4 owners us the 70-200/4 with Nikon 5T or 6T close-up filters (with step down 67 -> 62 ring) and report excellent results with no vignetting on film. Further, you can put both and get (I think) 2:1. That is twice of life size. HTH. Happy shooting , Yakim.
psoriano Posted April 29, 2004 Posted April 29, 2004 Look at that table from Bob Atkins http://www.bobatkins.com/photography/eosfaq/closeup.htm Seems that the 70-200 f4L with the 500/500D close-up lens can allow you a 0.55 magnification. Combined with you extension tube you will be near 1:1 at a comfortable distance to the object Have you made a test with the 25mm extender tube and your lenses?
eosdoc Posted May 1, 2004 Posted May 1, 2004 How do any of these suggestions allow for lens movements to do shift-macro?
awindsor Posted May 2, 2004 Posted May 2, 2004 Julan, <p> On an EOS camer with stop down metering you can mount a medium format manual focus lens and use a Tilt-Shift macro adaptor from <A HREF="http:// www.zoerk.com">Zörk</A> to get tilt-shift macro lens.<p> However I should point out that the poster wants a makeshift macro rather than to make a shift macro :)
eosdoc Posted May 2, 2004 Posted May 2, 2004 Alstair, <P> I already have a TS-E 24mm f/3.5 L for non-macro work. But it is too wide for macrophotography. <P> Will I need a medium format macro lens to use with the Zörk adapter? How does that compare to a TS-E 90mm with extension tubes or a close-up diopter? <P> Would it be better to consider a dedicated macro lens, such as the 85mm f/2.8 PC Micro-Nikkor <a href= http://www.nikonusa.com/template.php?cat=1&grp=5&productNr=1458NAS >http://www.nikonusa.com/template.php?cat=1&grp=5&productNr=1458NAS</a>
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