Dear Forum,
as Mr. O'Toole has shown the Dimage 5400 lens is absolutely fantastic. Unfortunately the scanners light source is pretty poor. Both scanner models produce uneven light that shows itself in the picture as vertical stripes and horizontal color shifts from magenta to green. It's not very obvious but once you have seen it, it gets really annoying. Especially when you try to counter for it in Lightroom.
So I thought I would copy Mr. O’Toole's approach and stick the lens via adapters on my Canon 6D and use a Kaiser Filmcopy Vario as lightsource and film mask.
Maybe someone could kindly help me with a couple of questions before I go out and spend money:
1. Does this lens produce sharp pictures on a fullframe camera when reproducing 1:1?
2. How do I focus a lens like that? By adjusting the space between lens and subject?
Thank you very much in advance!
Image source: https://www.fotointern.ch/archiv/2018/0 ... alisieren/
Minolta 5400 Lens for DSLR Scanning
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
Re: Minolta 5400 Lens for DSLR Scanning
1) The lens was not designed for 1:1 magnification but still works at 1:1, so you leave the optimum of this lens. Did you read Robert O'Tooles 1:1 lens test, so may be the Sigma 70mm Art is better suited for your purpose.JaroslawKubiak wrote: 1. Does this lens produce sharp pictures on a fullframe camera when reproducing 1:1?
2. How do I focus a lens like that? By adjusting the space between lens and subject?
2) yes,with the distance lens<->sensor you control the magnification and with distance lens<->object you control focus