weedmili.blogg.se

Fuji x system adapter to leica x system lens
Fuji x system adapter to leica x system lens








fuji x system adapter to leica x system lens
  1. FUJI X SYSTEM ADAPTER TO LEICA X SYSTEM LENS FULL
  2. FUJI X SYSTEM ADAPTER TO LEICA X SYSTEM LENS SERIES

I may get other use out of this lens, or not. If 200mm is too long, I'll add the focal reducer and the lens will become something like a 142mm/2.8. The subject distance will be predetermined by where we are sitting (ok, there is a high likelihood I will move for the photo, but anyway.), so AF is a non-issue. I could, of course, rent a lens, but that would be bigger, heavier and a hassle when combined with travel. It is the only need I have for this focal length. I got a Nikon 200mm/4 for my daughters outdoor graduation. If I want to work efficiently, such as at an event, where I might make several hundred images in variable, usually poor, lighting conditions, I will use almost exclusively Fuji lenses. So I'm curious especially whether this whole adapted lens bit is a fading reality or not. Zooms are okay, but also take more room in a carry bag than a couple of primes (not always). Since for my part, I sold off everything to go into Fuji, for me the venture has been to fill in a gap in the prime line-up. I'm focusing on Leica - but broaden it to any lens maker - to ask whether use of adapted lenses is being done here to utilize existing owned stock, or whether folks are actually going out and acquiring lenses to adapt as a preference - whether to fill a gap in Fuji's line, to use in place of Fuji's line up, or as part of cross-pollination - using a set of lenses for more than one camera system. I am curious whether the broader lens line up of Fuji XF lenses has impacted those using Leica lenses on their Fuji's. Ac complete list of Hasselblad XPan lenses can be found here.Much of the traffic here on Leica lenses and Fuji X cameras seems to come from a few years back when the XF line-up was limited and Fuji was the new kid on the block. Hasselblad lenses were black Fuji lenses were a sort of silvery colour. To my knowledge, they were optically identical lenses, differentiated only by the pain colour. Fujifilm was responsible for manufacturing all XPan lenses, and the lenses were available with either Hasselblad or Fujifilm branding on the packages. Note that the Hasselblad XPan cameras were developed in joint partnership with Fujifilm, and Fuji also sold the camera branded as a Fuji TX-1 and later a TX-2. Due to their design as a panoramic lens, the camera will automatically apply a panoramic crop to the images created when one of these lenses is mounted. These lenses were created for the Hasselblad XPan panoramic camera, which used 35mm film. XPan lenses are not manufactured anymore but are readily available on the second-hand market. The adapter only adds 21.4mm to the length of the lenses and weighs just 112g.

fuji x system adapter to leica x system lens

FUJI X SYSTEM ADAPTER TO LEICA X SYSTEM LENS SERIES

Using the Hasselblad XPan Adapter you can mount Hasselbad XPan lenses to the X Series cameras. A complete list of HCD lenses and their specifications can be found here.

FUJI X SYSTEM ADAPTER TO LEICA X SYSTEM LENS FULL

Using the Hasselblad H System adapter, all Hasselblad H System HCD lenses can be used on X System cameras whilst maintaining leaf shutter support and full electronic communication for autofocus and aperture control. List of Hasselblad H System Lenses (HC/HCD) XCD 135mm f/2.8 + 1.7 converter (f4.8 with converter) List of Hasselblad XCD Lenses XCD 30mm f/3.5 XCD 90mm f/3.2 XCD 120mm f/3.5 Macro XCD 21mm f/4 XCD 80mm f/1.9 XCD 65mm f/2.8 XCD 135mm f/2.8 XCD 35-75mm f/3.5-4.5 XCD 45mm f/3.5Įntrance Pupil Position (in front of image plane) If you broaden your horizons even further, the three available Hasselblad lens adapters open your options up to include 3 panoramic XPan lenses, 12 modern Hasselblad H System lenses and over sixty legacy C, CB, CF, CFI, CFE, F and FE lenses. This makes the Hasselblad X System an intriguing possibility for travel and landscape photographers who want a compact system that has a huge range of focal lengths available already in the native XCD lens lineup. Most notable is the fact that the Hasselblad XCD lenses are all quite small and light, in keeping with the svelte design of the X1D cameras themselves. Whilst the original H1D camera was somewhat overshadowed by Fujifilm’s almost simultaneous launch of the GFX medium format system, Hasselblad has kept its heads down and built a stellar lineup of optically excellent lenses. Hasselblad’s X System is still in its infancy but the launch of the X1D II camera, and development announcement for the modular 907x camera has sparked new interest in the system. Hasselblad 907X camera with CFVII 50C digital back.










Fuji x system adapter to leica x system lens