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  • New meets Old

    I recently bought a OM 50mm 1.8 Lens from Graham a member here (thanks Graham ), I wanted it to produce creative DOF portraits. First impressions are very good, im pretty happy with the sharpness even wide open

    I can see this becoming a favourite lens of mine

    First of all this is what it looks like on my E-5





    and heres some sample shots I took today, all taken @f1.8







    Thanks for looking
    E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

    Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

  • #2
    Re: New meets Old

    A cracking lens it is, sharpness is excellent for a standard lens, I find it a bit squiggly wide open but 1 stop down it's fantastic. The later f1.4 is meant to be the best one. I'd imagine the E5 will help pull out some more resolution wide open though.

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    • #3
      Re: New meets Old

      Originally posted by Alan Clogwyn View Post
      A cracking lens it is, sharpness is excellent for a standard lens, I find it a bit squiggly wide open but 1 stop down it's fantastic. The later f1.4 is meant to be the best one. I'd imagine the E5 will help pull out some more resolution wide open though.
      Yes I agree I took some shots at 2.8 and it is much sharper, but its just fine for what I want to do at 1.8
      E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

      Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

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      • #4
        Re: New meets Old

        I've got one of these but never used it on my E system.Always paranoid about more gear and more weight to carry.

        Looking at these I supose I'll have to crack and get an OM adaptor

        I've got the 50mm f2,just wonder if there will be much difference in DOF,bokah etc.
        All the best

        Being left handed my brain sometimes works sdrawkcab

        Andy

        Lots of cameras and lenses.


        My Flickr

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        • #5
          Re: New meets Old

          Originally posted by andym View Post
          I've got one of these but never used it on my E system.Always paranoid about more gear and more weight to carry.

          Looking at these I supose I'll have to crack and get an OM adaptor

          I've got the 50mm f2,just wonder if there will be much difference in DOF,bokah etc.
          Thank Andy I can't comment on the 50mm f2 but the dof is greater than my 50-200 @ 50mm 2.8, well enough to make a creative difference imho.

          I used to carry my kit 14-42 as a backup in my bag, but this just replaced it
          E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

          Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

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          • #6
            Re: New meets Old

            I have one of these along with a 50mm f3.5 macro, the macro is an amazing lens, and I tend to keep it on my OM2 most of the time.

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            • #7
              Re: New meets Old

              Anorak mode - that is the "Made in Japan" version, as shown on the front of the lens. From what I remember from long-distant OM forums, this was the latest version and was generally thought to be the sharpest of the f/1.8s.

              Of the other OM 50s:

              - the 2 macro lenses, f/2 and f/3.5 were very sharp. No idea what bokeh was like. The f/2 was pretty expensive, the f/3.5 was sometimes an absolute bargain. Would focus to pretty close without needing extension tubes.

              - the f/1.4s were pretty variable. Early ones were considered soft, later ones much better (serieal numbers past 1.1 million IIRC).

              - the old f/1.2 (actually 55mm rather than 50 but I've included it for completeness) was pretty soft. The later 50/1.2 was razor-sharp.

              Of course whether sharp/soft is good/bad or not depends very much on your application.

              Right, anorak mode off. It's Saturday night and the pubs are open to it's time to go and get a life.

              Ciao ... John

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              • #8
                Re: New meets Old

                Originally posted by pepper View Post
                I have one of these along with a 50mm f3.5 macro, the macro is an amazing lens, and I tend to keep it on my OM2 most of the time.
                I have the 35mm f3.5 macro digital version and that is a cracker too, zuiko are absolutely superb lenses, old or new and make it almost impossible to leave Olympus once you have used and appreciate them
                E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

                Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

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                • #9
                  Re: New meets Old

                  Originally posted by Bikie John View Post
                  Anorak mode - that is the "Made in Japan" version, as shown on the front of the lens. From what I remember from long-distant OM forums, this was the latest version and was generally thought to be the sharpest of the f/1.8s.

                  Of the other OM 50s:

                  - the 2 macro lenses, f/2 and f/3.5 were very sharp. No idea what bokeh was like. The f/2 was pretty expensive, the f/3.5 was sometimes an absolute bargain. Would focus to pretty close without needing extension tubes.

                  - the f/1.4s were pretty variable. Early ones were considered soft, later ones much better (serieal numbers past 1.1 million IIRC).

                  - the old f/1.2 (actually 55mm rather than 50 but I've included it for completeness) was pretty soft. The later 50/1.2 was razor-sharp.

                  Of course whether sharp/soft is good/bad or not depends very much on your application.

                  Right, anorak mode off. It's Saturday night and the pubs are open to it's time to go and get a life.

                  Ciao ... John
                  Ha ha, thanks for the info john, very interesting. Well from what I've seen today this one does seam to be a good Sharp example
                  E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

                  Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

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                  • #10
                    Re: New meets Old

                    Wowza Steve, that black and white portrait is fantastic. I absolutely love the processing you've applied to it, it's really superb.

                    What a character you've made of your models face - one of the better B&W shots I've seen in a while.

                    PS: forgot to mention, I agree with you that the OM 50mm f1.8 is a tremendous lens and I regularly use mine. Did you ever see some shots I did of the Purton wrecks...? I used the 50mm f1.8 on some of those and the rendering is superb. You should get even better with your E5.
                    John

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                    • #11
                      Re: New meets Old

                      I find it a bit squiggly
                      That's a technical term, I take it?

                      I'm currently having a whole load of fun with a couple of old CZJ Sonnar lenses on my Olympus e520...I must have a look at older OM lenses too!

                      That black and white portrait is absolutely spot on.

                      Janet
                      My flickr photostream....


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                      • #12
                        Re: New meets Old

                        Thanks Janet and john, I'm glad you like the portrait, I took the shot and lit it the scene to process it this way, so I'm really happy the subject ( my father in law Alan) and others liked it, because it is a very harsh effect and I was nervous what people would think

                        I didn't realise you had used this lens for those shots john, just shows how versatile it is.
                        E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

                        Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

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                        • #13
                          Re: New meets Old

                          I love this lens, and the Zuiko 28mm, on my m4/3 kit. I'd love an f.14 version, but am too tight to pay for one!
                          Stephen

                          A camera takes a picture. A photographer makes a picture

                          Fuji X system, + Leica and Bronica film

                          My Flickr site

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                          • #14
                            Re: New meets Old

                            Originally posted by Bikie John View Post
                            the 2 macro lenses, f/2 and f/3.5 were very sharp. No idea what bokeh was like. The f/2 was pretty expensive, the f/3.5 was sometimes an absolute bargain. Would focus to pretty close without needing extension tubes.

                            John
                            Both 50mm macro lenses went to 1/2 life size. Add the 25mm extension tube and they went to life size. Both lenses had floating elements allowing for aberration correction at close focusing.

                            I used/owned 3 samples of the f3.5 model and found a lot of sample variation between them.
                            It's the image that's important, not the tools used to make it.

                            David M's Photoblog

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                            • #15
                              Re: New meets Old

                              Originally posted by StephenL View Post
                              I love this lens, and the Zuiko 28mm, on my m4/3 kit. I'd love an f.14 version, but am too tight to pay for one!
                              E-M10 Mk2 - 14-42mm EZ - 40-150mm ED - Falcon 8mm Fisheye - FL-36R

                              Wedding Photography Wales | Commercial Photography | Party Photographer Cardiff | Cheap Business Cards | Photoshop Training Cardiff

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