Does anyone has the experience on this matter.
Will there has dark corners when shooting 14mm fisheye with 1D mark II. 
HKFEVER Goldmember More info | Nov 19, 2004 07:36 | #1 Does anyone has the experience on this matter.
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Nov 19, 2004 09:20 | #2 I believe most 14 mm fisheyes would be full-frame even on 35 mm. So it'll fully cover anything smaller. Whose fisheye is this? Canon and Sigma have 15 mm offerings, not 14. Jon
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Nov 20, 2004 02:26 | #3 Sorry, it is Canon 15mm fisheye.
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IncompletePete Senior Member 274 posts Likes: 16 Joined Aug 2004 Location: UK More info | Nov 20, 2004 02:34 | #4 Judging by your current set-up, I'd go the the Canon version, Sigma just wouldn't cut it for you! www.sportsshooter.com/pete
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blackviolet Goldmember 1,313 posts Likes: 4 Joined Apr 2004 Location: sydney, au (now in singapore for a few years) More info | Nov 20, 2004 03:43 | #5 there are no dark corners on the 15mm fisheye even on full frame bodies. i have both a sigma 15mm and a zenitar 16mm and they are great on the mkii. here is one example --
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Nov 20, 2004 04:23 | #6 Thanks guys, can anyone post a Canon fisheye shot.
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DaveG Goldmember 2,040 posts Likes: 1 Joined Aug 2003 Location: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia More info | Nov 20, 2004 07:56 | #7 HKFEVER wrote: Does anyone has the experience on this matter. Will there has dark corners when shooting 14mm fisheye with 1D mark II. ![]() There are two kinds of fisheye lenses, full frame and circular. The circular produces a disk on the film/capture like the image circle was to small to cover the format, which is exactly the case. The full frame fisheye just has a bigger image circle. "There's never time to do it right. But there's always time to do it over."
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Nov 20, 2004 09:15 | #8 Thank you, will post some picture after the job.
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Kenski Senior Member 724 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Va Beach, Va More info | Nov 20, 2004 10:06 | #9 Permanent banI have some 15mm canon shots but they are all on a 1.6x sensor, not on a 1.3 sensor... I don't think you want them then... [highlight]40D, 30D, 300D 10-22mm 15mm 17-40mm 24-70mm 50mm 60mm 70-200 IS, 100-400 IS[/highlight]
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planesh00ter Member 92 posts Joined Apr 2004 Location: Kuwait More info | Nov 20, 2004 22:13 | #10 Sigma- 370$, Canon-574$
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Nov 20, 2004 22:34 | #11 You are right "L" is not the issue, I am more concern:
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blackviolet Goldmember 1,313 posts Likes: 4 Joined Apr 2004 Location: sydney, au (now in singapore for a few years) More info | Nov 21, 2004 04:31 | #12 one big thing to remember - since you are letting in more light, the fisheyes tend to overexpose very quickly if you aren't careful --
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DaveG Goldmember 2,040 posts Likes: 1 Joined Aug 2003 Location: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia More info | Nov 21, 2004 07:39 | #13 blackviolet wrote: one big thing to remember - since you are letting in more light, the fisheyes tend to overexpose very quickly if you aren't careful here is another example That's not true. "There's never time to do it right. But there's always time to do it over."
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Nov 21, 2004 09:11 | #14 Thank you guys, I just went out 3 hrs ago and bought the Canon 15mm fisheye.
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blackviolet Goldmember 1,313 posts Likes: 4 Joined Apr 2004 Location: sydney, au (now in singapore for a few years) More info | Nov 21, 2004 13:40 | #15 DaveG wrote: That's not true. An f-stop is an f-stop. How does a fisheye at f8 let in any more light that a 100mm lens at f8? and if you change to f5.6 on either lens you let in one more stop, no more no less. believe me, i have always thought that as well. i don't know if they average to get to f8 (to accomodate the longer light path of image at the edges) or if they have completely mis-calculated all of the aperture settings on both lenses??! all i know is i have to stop down 1/3 of a stop or more on both of my fisheyes compared to any of my other lenses or it can blow highlights near the centre of the image (and when i tested the canon, i had to do the same). --
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