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Inn Valley (Bavaria/Austria), Leica Elmarit-R 2.8/35 v2 on Sony A7rIII

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Am 4.2.2024 um 00:25 schrieb rob70:

Inn Valley (Bavaria/Austria), Leica Elmarit-R 2.8/35 v2 on Sony A7rIII

Taken from or close to Kranzhorn mountain, I presume.

 

Am 30.1.2024 um 23:03 schrieb rob70:

Elmarit-R 2.8/180 v2 on Sony A7R3, Crop

That one is fabulous! Großglockner?

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Leica R8 on slide film. Scanned wit Nikon LS4000.
I forgot which lens I used. I had the Elmarit 35 and the Summilux 80 with me.
What do you think which lens I used?

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17 hours ago, leicameter said:

 

Leica R8 on slide film. Scanned wit Nikon LS4000.
I forgot which lens I used. I had the Elmarit 35 and the Summilux 80 with me.
What do you think which lens I used?

I suppose you used Elmarit 35: I don't see the green fringes of CA typical of 80 Summilux.

Fernando.

 

 

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M-P w/Vario-Elmar-R 28-70.

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Am 6.2.2024 um 18:10 schrieb leicameter:

Leica R8 on slide film. Scanned wit Nikon LS4000.
I forgot which lens I used. I had the Elmarit 35 and the Summilux 80 with me.
What do you think which lens I used?

das sind die Erdpyramiden am Ritten in Bozen Südtirol und auf grund der Tiefenstaffelung mit dem 80 er fotografiert

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On 2/6/2024 at 4:32 PM, wizard said:

Taken from or close to Kranzhorn mountain, I presume.

 

That one is fabulous! Großglockner?

Thank you!
The second and third of my images were taken from Heuberg, the neigbor of Kranzhorn. 
The one with the Elmarit 180: Yes that's Großglockner. It was taken from the summit of Hochries.

Edited by rob70
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Mesh

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Sony 7Rii w/Summicron-R 50 Safari.

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Leica Elmarit-R 2.8/28 v1 @ f/2.8 on Sony A7r III, full frame. Exposure = -0,5, resized to max thread size

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SL2 + Elmarit R 180 V2

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A visitor from afar

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S1r w/Elmerit-R 35.

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SL with Apo-Telyt-R 3.4/180mm on tripod 1/160 f8.0

Distance ca. 2-3 km, Bakio (Spain)

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Sun through a somewhat cloudy sky.

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fp with Telyt R 500mm, tripod, dark filter, b/w in Postscript

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Thank you for the like, dunk.

Of course, the b/w conversion was not in Postscript, but in post (Photoshop). The cloudy sky of the last weeks is annoying. I don't live in Chili.😀

Next time I shall use my extender. The picture of the sun is still relatively small. 

---

Naturally, it is not necessary to take pictures of the sun with my equipment. In the www one finds similar pictures, that are much better and taken at places without trees.😀  But I have read, that there are many sunspots at the moment and I possess a long lens. So I gave it a try.

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Hello Jan, Maybe prudent to mention for the benefit of others that the type of filter used for solar photography is very important. The Sun's dangerous UV wavelengths are invisible to the human eye and when viewed through any telescope or binocular without the correct type of solar filter can cause instant blindness. Safer to project the Sun's image onto e.g. a sheet of translucent engineers drafting film and then photograph same, i.e., back project the eyepiece image onto the drafting film. There are solar photography articles / guides available online , e.g. https://brazosvalleyastronomyclub.org/newsletters/summer-2019/photographing-sunspots.html.  However, even the visible wavelengths can be dangerous. An astro society colleague's telescope eyepiece's elements melted and fused together – ruined an expensive eyepiece. He was using the projection method and the drafting film was cool – but the eyepiece acting as the projection lens became literally 'too hot to handle'.   I am planning to photograph sunspots using a Lunt solar telescope . 

BW, dunk 

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Walking in the Night.   Torchlit nocturnal walk at Kings Dyke Nature Reserve, Whittlesey near Peterborough UK      

Sony A7S / Leica APO Macro Elmarit R 100/2.8  ISO 40000 (Forty Thousand)  0.5sec f5.6   30 May 2023 22.45hrs 

BW, dunk 

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Museum Beyerler, Basel

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Sony 6500 Summicron R

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vor 15 Stunden schrieb dkCambridgeshire:

Hello Jan, Maybe prudent to mention for the benefit of others that the type of filter used for solar photography is very important. The Sun's dangerous UV wavelengths are invisible to the human eye and when viewed through any telescope or binocular without the correct type of solar filter can cause instant blindness. Safer to project the Sun's image onto e.g. a sheet of translucent engineers drafting film and then photograph same, i.e., back project the eyepiece image onto the drafting film. There are solar photography articles / guides available online , e.g. https://brazosvalleyastronomyclub.org/newsletters/summer-2019/photographing-sunspots.html.  However, even the visible wavelengths can be dangerous. An astro society colleague's telescope eyepiece's elements melted and fused together – ruined an expensive eyepiece. He was using the projection method and the drafting film was cool – but the eyepiece acting as the projection lens became literally 'too hot to handle'.   I am planning to photograph sunspots using a Lunt solar telescope . 

BW, dunk 

You are right. Very dangerous, if one is not prepared. I have some solar eclipses behind me already.😁

The dark filter, I use the Baader Astro Solar Safety Film OD 5.0, must be in front of the lens. In FRONT of the lens, so the camera, that is used as an eyepiece, is not in danger. 

Plus, I secure the filter from falling off with elastic bands!

OD 5.0 means 1 to 100,000, that corresponds to (almost) 17 fstops.

Edited by jankap
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Panorama from 12 images in portrait orientation, Leica Elmarit-R 2.8/28 v1 on Sony A7R III. About half an hour after sunset in the Bavarian Alps on Mt. Feichteck. The mountain in the middle is called Spitzstein, the mountain range in the back is Kaiser Gebirge ("Emperor mountains"). 

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