tanalasta
16-04-2011, 5:11pm
These are a few first impressions of the D7000 (DX) with the 85mm f/1.4G.
There were no front or back focus issues at the focal lengths I was shooting with and these were all shot using autofocus. Mostly D-9, AF-C. Is my copy a little soft? I don't know... although that may be a benefit of a portrait lens.
Overall, I find this lens balances quite well on the D7000 which is marginally heavier than the D90. It is not as overly heavy as the FX mid-range f/2.8 zooms.
Build quality and handling are superb. It tends to nail the focus with the D7000, even at f/1.4
Online review sites are better than I am at describing the performance but I am overall quite happy with this!
Not exactly a flower lens, but these were both shot at f/1.4 and demonstrate how lovely the bokeh is.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3253.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3223.jpg
Take about 2 metre step back and it can also make a food lens! Not really what it was designed to do... but also at f/1.4
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3205.jpg
This photo was taken at f/1.6 and not wide open by accident
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/Random_dog.jpg
As for an example of a bad photo... Even AF-C could not keep up with these two ducks circling each other at high speed. f/1.8, 1/4000 seconds at ISO 100. Also misfocussed on the duck's body and not the head.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3234.jpg
One of the advantages of the D7000 is that at base ISO 100 and 1/8000s shutter speed, you have more leeway using the lens wide open in bright light and don't need a ND filter.
There were no front or back focus issues at the focal lengths I was shooting with and these were all shot using autofocus. Mostly D-9, AF-C. Is my copy a little soft? I don't know... although that may be a benefit of a portrait lens.
Overall, I find this lens balances quite well on the D7000 which is marginally heavier than the D90. It is not as overly heavy as the FX mid-range f/2.8 zooms.
Build quality and handling are superb. It tends to nail the focus with the D7000, even at f/1.4
Online review sites are better than I am at describing the performance but I am overall quite happy with this!
Not exactly a flower lens, but these were both shot at f/1.4 and demonstrate how lovely the bokeh is.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3253.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3223.jpg
Take about 2 metre step back and it can also make a food lens! Not really what it was designed to do... but also at f/1.4
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3205.jpg
This photo was taken at f/1.6 and not wide open by accident
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/Random_dog.jpg
As for an example of a bad photo... Even AF-C could not keep up with these two ducks circling each other at high speed. f/1.8, 1/4000 seconds at ISO 100. Also misfocussed on the duck's body and not the head.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v474/Tanalasta/MelvilleNursery-3234.jpg
One of the advantages of the D7000 is that at base ISO 100 and 1/8000s shutter speed, you have more leeway using the lens wide open in bright light and don't need a ND filter.