I love my 65mpe, a truely amazing lens. At 5x, available light photography can be difficult because the lens is so close to the subject it can interfere with the lighting.
I obtained a bargain large format lens commonly used in the reproduction area, a Schneider 58mm repro-claron. It was surprisngly small and screwed on to one of my sets of tubes. Mounting it on about 325 mm of extension in the form of bellows and tubes, I estimate that the image is nearly 5x.
For natural light photography, it has two advantages over my 65mpe. It truly has a focal lenth of 58mm at 5x unlike the mpe which shortens its focal length substantially at higher magnifications. Also it has a much thinner profile. The upshot is that you are 5 or so inches from your subject away at 5x and you don't cast as much of a shadow. It's a very slow lens, f8 so it does not have the nice bright image. At magnificatio, the image is dim in deed and I used a flashlight to additional light for focussing.
I was fascinated by this spine cluster of a Mammillaria theresea and wanted to see what it looked under magnification.
Please let me know what you think. Hope you enjoy.
Irwin
PS after I posted, I saw a few areas in which I did not remove the halo. I will do so later and repost the cleaned up image.
as I think it is that musta been hellish hard to shoot especially with everything being so white.



