Fujifilm XF14mm f/2.8 R

I’ve been looking for a while to pick up another lens, but was waiting for the right time etc.   However the marketing people at Fujifilm know this so a well timed £100 voucher and the winter cash back tempted me.

I was looking at picking up the XF18mm to accompany my X-E3 and 27mm.   Unfortunately the 18mm (along with the 23, 35, and 50) was excluded in the £100 voucher offer so I had to look elsewhere (I could’ve simply just not bothered, but a £100+Cashback saving is hard to turn down).

Why the 14mm?  I’ve toyed with a few different lenses such as the 56mm and 90mm.  The 56mm is a choice of many portrait photographers (matches roughly the 85mm on a Full Frame sensor) – but as I don’t really shoot portraits  it’s probably not a great choice at the moment.

The 90mm is a bit of an odd size (similar to the 135mm on FF), but having previously owned the Canon EF135 f/2 L it’s a type of lens I loved.   Still at this moment I consider it to be a nice to have lens rather than something that would get a lot of use.

Fujifilm X-E3, XF14mm f/2.8 R

Package wise, the XF14mm is a small compact unit – although not as small as the 18mm or the 27mm lenses.   It’s compact enough to fit in my small bag which I take to work in my rucksack.  The hood adds a little to the bulk,  but it’s an item you’d need to carry around as being a wide lens you may get a bit of flare in the sun light.

Fujifilm X-E3, XF14mm f/2.8 R

One of the annoyances with the 27mm pancake lens is the lack of the aperture ring, its a welcome addition on the 14mm.   Feature wise the 14mm is a little sparse, no IS and no obvious manual focus option.  The latter is available – the switch is actually the focus ring.  The ring can be pushed forward to enable auto focus and pulled back to switch to manual.  It’s a bit odd,  but you do get used to it.

14mm vs 18mm

Unfortunatley I purchased the lens on one the most miserable days of the year so far – hence testing have been limited.  The above image shows the what the extra 4mm gives you.   Granted it’s not a super wide angle (around 21mm on FF) but for most of my street/architecture images it’ll allow me to get a bit more in.

Close up Bokeh
Lens cap vs 27mm

In the end after the discount I picked the lens up for £644, plus after 30 days I’ll be able to claim back an additional £135 – so £509 for a nice wide angle was worth it.  Initial testing looks good, but I’ll be a better position to do some real testing next week when I’m back in the city centre.

Digital Entries for 1st Quarterly Competition

Here are the two selections for the PDI side of the first quarterly competition.

First image, titled Millennium Point.

Taken on one of my lunch time walks at work.   Fujifilm X-E3,  XF28mm,  ƒ8 – 1/420 – iso200

The Second image is titled:  The Church

Fujifilm X-Pro2,  XF18-55mm,  ƒ6.4 – 2min – iso200 – SRB ND1000 Filter fitted.

I wanted a slow exposure to capture a ghostly image of the minister as the service was conducted.   A bit of negative Dehaze tool has created a HDR effect.

 

YPS – 1st Quarterly 2018/19 Season

Entries for the YPS 1st Quarterly Print/PDI competition

In a change from most years, this season I’ve decided to take the print competitions more seriously.  One of the main reasons is we struggle with prints in the Interclub competitions – so anything I can do to help this season has got to be worth it.   Previously I’ve talked about printing and came to the conclusion that a lab print is better value with the limited quantity of prints required for the year (10 probably would cover them – I tend never to re-enter any of my images more than once).

So the first two prints are ones that have been viewed 4000 times between them on Flickr.

The left image is titled Cigarette Break (Fire Office Passage, Birmingham).  It’s in my top ten with 2,800 views.

Technical Details:  Fujifilm X-E3 – XF27mm –  ƒ/2.8 – 1/950 – iso200

Printed by Steve at Palm Labs on Kodak Endura Matt Paper.

The right image is titled City Refections (Shine and Shade on Flickr) – Taken from the back of Grand Central Station (Birmingham).  This one is a little less successful as it’s propping up the top 20 with 1822 views.

Technical Details:  Fujifilm X-E3 – XF27mm –  ƒ/5.0 – 1/55 – iso200

Printed by Steve at Palm Labs on Kodak Endura Metallic Paper – I’ve tried a number of images with this paper and it lifts with image a little – not too sure what will happen when viewed on the daylight balanced lightbox the club has though.

The intension with publishing of these images well before the submission date is to keep on top of where my images are going.  I intend to do the same with the digital competition, however these last few weeks haven’t been great – so some things are slipping through the net a bit.   Hopefully all back on track again soon.

The Print Process

As a photographer I should really be printing shouldn’t I?

Well it’s taken me long enough to get round to looking at printing.   I don’t mean printing at home as that is pretty much a false economy.  A decent A3 printer, configured to use continuous inking systems and the cost of paper you’re looking at around £400 just to start.  And that’s before you factor in calibration etc.   So printing then – Labs prints aren’t cheap, but when you consider how much I print then Lab costs mean I can probably do 40-50 prints before it costs more.   And by lab prints I mean A3 and above.

Central Library Pano

The above image I’ve had printed by Palm Labs for £10, we had a few calibration issues with some moiré patterning so I’ve ended up with 3 other prints (which I gave Steve £10 for) which were going to be binned – which for me are fine for print samples.     This print could not be done at home as it’s 32″ x 8″ so already a home printing solution wouldn’t be viable here.

The next step is framing, the library pano is no use for club competitions due to the size, but the intention was always for get a frame and mount for it.   Currently the cheapest price is around £35 from a company called Picframes – who I have no experience with, but at that price it’s certainly worth a punt.

 

Scanning again…

This time it’s a few scans of a couple of recent lunchtime walks around Birmingham.   Using my Canon AV-1 and loaded with Ilford Delta 400 I took a walk around the rotunda side of the city.

Tank
Millenium Point
Bush
Millenium Point
Mr Egg
Under the Bull

A mixed bag as you can see, but it’s a struggle to find new viewpoints in the City – I’ll keep trying and hoping the avoid the usual suspects in terms of pictures.