<p>your link doesn't work due to the spaces; this leads to the same page (with different title):<br>
<a href="http://www.stevehuffphoto.com/tag/tri-elmar/">http://www.stevehuffphoto.com/tag/tri-elmar</a><br>
I did my tests with a E55 MATE. it is not a zoom since the focus isn't continous. turning from 50 to 28mm, close to 28mm it suddenly snaps into 28mm and the macro-mode is gone.<br>
The easiest, fastest, reliable way to get good results in shooting macro with TriElmar is to set aperture priority mode, ISO to 320 if sunny, distance to 1m, f/4 to provide for precise focus through electronic view finder while turning focal length between 50mm and 28mm, shoot (great bokeh), optionally stop down aperture for more DoF, shoot again.<br>
(For someone like me who worked a lot with Visoflex, it is puzzling that the VF doesnt dimm down when closing the aperture.)<br>
works great on any MFT-cam. with right eye on VF, the left eye sees the f-stops. I shot all photos in the album without tripod. you only need a EVF, MFT/LM-adapter (I use panasonic/lumix). should also work with Leica M240. only a little bit more expensive than a PEN. ;)<br>
> When you have 28mm and 50mm, do you need 35mm?<br>
from my experience, yes. and even or more so with MFT' crop factor 2. used both in the album's sheep photos.<br>
*<br>
I also tried (without Visoflex!) Leitz Bellows ii with Elmar 3.5/65mm [and extension tube] on MFT with VF-4. great results. but heavy and less suitable since when bellows moves to get the object closer, one needs to move the position of the camera too to get focus back. (this problem is not related to MFT)</p>
<div></div>