When I watch your videos, I feel like I am learning from a photographer rather than a RUclipsr or an Instagrammer. That is very appreciated. Well done.
I echo this sentiment and just subscribed for that very reason. I’m actually learning vs someone just trying to gain a like, etc. Great tip at the end about manual focus. I have a vintage 50mm adapted to my 11-yr old Sony…it’s my favorite lens, but my primary concern was obtaining focus in time to not miss the shot. Peace.
Nice tip on starting manual focus with lens set at infinity to quickly find focus. I recently purchased the Fuji 33mm f1.4 lens & it has become one of my favourites. Tack sharp, with nice contrast & it is quick to find focus.
in the 90s, I worked for one of the biggest news magazines. two of our primary photographers never walked anywhere without at least one camera on them. they always kept 50mm lenses on those casual rigs that they just slung over their shoulder or around their neck.
After years of shooting 35 and 50, I've recently switched to 28 and 40 and it's been a great adjustment. 40mm is a great focal length to work with, but of course lens options and frame lines for it on RF cameras can be limited. I've been shooting with the Minolta CLE with 28/40 and I'm finding everything about it much more comfortable and suitable.
when i was shooting film with my pentaxk1000 i would constantly use sunny16 and set my manual lens to "zone focus" about 2-3 feet from my subject and it generally didn't let me down, of course i would minor tweak my focus
Found you via the podcast you did with Paul R. You already gave me a cool tip here about manual focussing. I just started picking up my old manual film kit again and so it's a really handy tip for me! I love what I've seen so far. Cheers, N
Thank you for this video. The choice of your lens is very personal. I see many RUclipsrs using 28 and even 24mm. Too wide for me. Sometimes I use a two body and lens setup so the 2nd Les is 85mm. I go back & forth between 35 & 50mm. The difference between the two is a step or two. Foot focus. I usually frame my image with the EVF. When the scene is moving quickly I just point, shoot, and hope. The 35mm field of view is more forgiving. As you point out, the 50mm is about what I see so I have to be more precise. I don’t spray & pray but do take several shots when not using the EVF. I’m a digital shooter so there is no penalty for taking multiple images. I bet HCB would have appreciated having this option in his bag of tools. Who says old dogs can’t learn new tricks? Normally I intend to produce tact sharp images. Recently I’ve been experimenting with intensional camera movement a la Ernst Haas. Last year I’d have said you blew the image at 4:53. Now I kind of like it. I know this has never happened to you. Occasionally I’ll make a mistake choosing a shutter speed such as when quickly taking the camera out of the bag (why was the camera in the bag?) to take the shot. Sometimes my setting get tossled when in the bag. I say a bad word or two but when I see the image I like it. I then tell my friends I intended to introduce the motion blur. So there I am. Sometimes I play at being HCB and other times EH. I can get medicine for this kind of thinking. Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
50mm has always been my go to, it allows me to get close enough to my subjects without having to walk into them like a 35 or wider and it allows me to get more of my subject without cropping off their body or standing a mile away "kidding" with a tele photo, i always hear street photographers bashing 50 but for me, unless i'm amongst crowds of people "which is not that common in chicago" then it's not really necessary for me to go wide. I have a 7artisan 12 t 2.9 lens(crop with fuji xt4) for such occasions but i will always love 50! (35f2 crop 1.4x)
I’m the same way. I find getting interesting compositions with a 50 relatively easy, for exactly the reason described in the video: what your eye sees is what you get. You don’t have to reposition yourself to regain the composition you first imagined. I also just don’t enjoy getting right into the personal space of strangers with a camera and snapping a picture, which I feel like I have to do a lot with a wide angle lens to prevent extraneous details in the frame, thus ruining the composition and minimizing the subject. As it is, I keep 50s on all my cameras except my F3, which sports a 35. I use my F3 exclusively for closer shots of friends and family, where I’ve got enough trust built up that I don’t have any reservation about getting close (and where the fact that it’s shutter noise is about ten times that of my M6 TTL is not a problem, for the same reason)
I've gone from 28mm and 35mm and recently spent a bit of time with a 50. The initial experience was one of using a telephoto lens. Took a while to change my way of seeing things and framing.
Over the decades, I have used Nikon, Pentax, Fuji, and Miranda 50mm lenses on 35mm film SLR cameras. My personal favorite was the 8-element 50mm f/1.4 Takumar for the Pentax Spotmatic SLR. The 50mm focal length on a full-frame body was my favorite for shooting live theatre.
Groovy riff on the 50mm world man. I'll be watching this video again. Thanks for reminding me that with a 50, my eye is the viewfinder. Also thanks for explaining why some of my lower-resolution sensors look sharper than the more pixel-packed ones. 12 and 16 MP can be stunning, and I've been wondering about this for quite a while.
A 50mm lens came with the first 35mm camera I purchased. I used it for about one year before I discovered that it was too “telephoto” for my taste. I replaced it with a 35mm f/2 and the 35mm became my favorite focal length for street photography, general subjects, and one-lens/one-camera situations. When I purchased my Leica M6 rangefinder, the 35mm f/1.4 was the first lens I purchased.
Great tips. I've always favoured 50mm but started using the Voigtlander 40mm f1.2 on my Sony and find that focal length very versatile. This is my first manual focus lens, and although there are limitations it's really not that difficult and makes me a bit more deliberate.
Nice, comprehensive and nuanced summary on the 50mm focal length for street photography. I'd have said exactly all that in my same video on the 50 mm lens, if I made one. Also, I was a fan of 28 mm for a long time, thinking the 50 was too boring. But Cartier-Bresson's philosophy behind sticking to mostly 50 mm during all his career, and also his talented shots captured with this lens, made me rethink my views on this focal length. There is something great in the simplicity it provides, taking away all the 'special effects' of any optical distortion of wider lenses, only leaving you with your vision, talent and ability to capture interesting subjects as the only means to make a great photograph.
Thanks for the tip on focusing starting at infinity, 99% of the time I shoot street at 28mm and zone focus but on other occasions shooting with the 50mm I have often pushed the focus tab the wrong way. Great content as always. 👍
for all of my PJ work in college and the local newspaper and then in the Air Force one body always had a 35mm f2. another most often had an 85 f1.8. i just picked up a vintage Canon Model P and a 50mm f1.4 and ive done a little playing with it. i LOVE it. its hard to 'go to infinity' because if i go past it, theres a locking detent (i presume for 'locking' the lens during mounting and dismounting. i dont know for sure. it uses the L39 screw mount) im hoping for some nice weather this weekend and week coming up. i want to go out and shoot another roll with it.
Glad I discovered your video! I'm a long time nifty fifty lens shooter on a full-frame Nikon, and I love the NATURAL perspective although I also have a 24-70mm zoom lens: The 50mm lens ROCKS! :)
I don't shoot 50mm that often, yet I've accumulated three of them: two Voigtlanders and a Helios 58/2. Stopped down a bit, the Helios is as sharp as the Voigtlander APO 50/2. But it's a lens that really shines when shot wide open.
First look at this channel. That was a really good presentation & advocacy for any "normal" focal length lens in any format. The detail on the handling and focusing the 50 was insightful, great advice for learners. Great advocacy of the Normal! Note that a fatter 50mm lens' longer focusing scale can be a plus, because it's easier to make a finer focus adjustment with more ring travel. Check out a Canon TS normal for the street, you can leave some rise locked in as you wander about, if you are into urban landscape.
Thanks for the comments. For me, the payoff with a larger lens is speed of focus and if you are shooting at f8, any additional accuracy is negated by depth of field. I had a Canon TS-E 45mm for a while.
Great video. 50mm is my Main Street lens as well. I have learned a certain distance and became out to shoot a summilux wide open with probably 80% success. I have also grow to now care as much about tack sharp images.
@@WalkLikeAlice If I could do it with a .95 I would be very happy haha. Don't have one though so haven't tried. Everyone really appreciates the quality of your channel. Real Photographer Talk.
Focusing any manual focus lens with a focus tab… learn and internalise the positions of the tab in the distances you use most often… 5, 3, and 2m for example. It takes time and patience but is extremely effective 👌🏻
That’s ok if the lens has a focus tab. None of our 50s have them. Leica don’t tend to put them on longer larger lenses as it’s easy to use the focus ring. On the smaller lenses it becomes harder hence the focus tab.
OMG! Why did it take me this long to learn how to focus that way? It. Just. Makes. Sense. I was just telling my wife how I noticed today that the good majority of photos I’ve taken with a zoom lens, tend to land directly at 50mm. I’ve shot 50mm prime for so long that I must naturally gravitate to that focal length when I’m shooting with a zoom.
28mm (Q2) is my preference I like to get close. I have just picked up a canon L3 body only so looked up some lenses I found a canon 50 1.8 cheap, so yup got that lovely lens, then an Elmar 5cm came up, with an M adapter apparently jammed onto it, so the selling price was cheap I couldn't resist as it looks awesome, a couple of rubber bands and a nip with long nose pliers got the adapter off, looking forward to shooting this new to me kit. I like the infinity stop tip cheers
I'm finding my 33mm Fuji lens (50mm equivalent) SO much more challenging than my old 16-55mm (24-84mm), while walking around London trying to take characterful vignettes of people living their lives. Like you say, it doesn't really do anything to the photos, and it can be hard to cut through the crowds when I have a fixed and slightly zoomy/tunnelvision focal length. I'm determined to crack it, though, as I want to maximise the role of my subjects and composition (not lens distortion, bokeh etc) in making my photos good. So I feel like I'm genuinely capturing life as it is.
Thanks. A very good video. 50mm is often too limiting for my type of street photography. I prefer 35. It’s what you look for as a good image. Then you decide which lens suits you best. The lens should come second.
Thanks for the hard stop idea when using a 50mm. I find that I am checking too often that it is set to where I think it is and s/he who hestitates is lost so to speak. With the 35 and 28 I can usually set it and forget it.
Focusing off the hard stop and reducing resolution settings on my M11 and Summicron without focus tab are great tips. And most importantly practice. It’s not a Q.
The version 3 50mm Summicron-M has both the short focus throw of the version 5 you are using, but has a focusing tab, which makes 'learning' the focus distance considerably easier. Worth finding one for yourself, IMHO.
Since decades 28mm is my preferred lens. Having enough „flesh“ around my subject i found another very fast and practical reason: You see a good situation in front of you and you have to adjust the proper framing - just step a bit forward into the scene - it‘s much easier and not so dangerous than to jump backwards. No eyes in the back of your head… I used 50 mm when the light was dim as in bars or arcades where the corners of frame became too dark with the slower wide angle lenses and not so important.
Great vid. I love using my 50mm at f2.0 on my M10, love the ethereal feel the shallow depth of field creates. But focusing is a nightmare. That turn to infinity trick is genius Jeff. Will definitely use that next time I'm out.
I have a 50mm lens for my Canon T6s but that camera is a crop sensor. I don't have one for either of my Nikon cameras. I just bought a used Canon AE-1 at a flea market with the 50mm lens with it. The glass looks in great shape. I plan to use black and white film in that camera. That will be a challenge for street photography. I'll have to be more deliberate with my shots and make every one count.
I use my Noctilux on a Canon R6II. I think the act of focusing is better than with a Leica body. I also have a focus tab ring on the lens that helps increase the rotation speed of the lens while focusing.
@@WalkLikeAlice I always used a lens hood but it barely blocked the 50mm frame lines. The 35mm Summilux is almost as bad. Plus the weight balance with the Canon is much better.
I have the 50mm 0.95 Noctilux on the 45mp Nikon Z9 and I’m completely new to street photography. I love this lens so much but it has been the most difficult lens I have ever used. I normally use 85mm for most of my photography (portrait work most of the time) and I have used an autofocus 50mm f1.2 in the past, but not for street photography. So the manual focus Leica 50mm 0.95 Noctilux has been very challenging to say the least. On my first day using it last week, of the 165 shots I took, only 5 were in focus. And those were lucky shots. The next day I took about 120 shots of which only 3 were in focus. Mind you, none of the photos were interesting in any way as I was just trying to get anything at all in focus if possible. It was then that I realized that trying to take photos of moving subjects at f1.2 or even f2.0 was impossible. I’ve watched quite a few videos of some very talented people who somehow are able to excel at this type of photography. So it’s a big learning process for me. On the third day walking around the city for over 4 hours with the lens set to f8 I was not able to take a single photo as I couldn’t find anything interesting no matter where I looked. Sometimes I just wonder if it is by chance that something out of the ordinary has to happen for an interesting photo to be taken. Walking around with a Noctilux on a Z9 means nothing if you can’t use it 😂😂😂 On the fourth day I was walking to a friend’s house and along the way I saw a motorcycle chained to a metal inside the fence of a property. It was the back of a small house that looked very old and the odd part was that the rear of the house faced the street. But the way that the motorcycle was positioned it looked as it was a dead end in front of the motorcycle. It would have been the coolest looking photo ever. But I didn’t have my camera with me! The next day I went looking for the street where the house was but couldn’t find it.
50mm isn’t easy on the street. Especially a manual focus lens. It takes years of practice to become proficient with it. Just get out there and practice even if you don’t get anything meaningful, those hours will stack up and increase your understanding of the lens.
@@WalkLikeAlice with the manual focus 50mm Noctilux that I have do you recommend auto ISO, and what metering mode do you think is best? I like to shoot photos of people and currently I’m using the Matrix metering. Maybe I should switch to the Center Weighted or Spot Metering? I only use the camera outdoors during the day
Not the first video of yours that I've watched, but this one made me subscribe. These pictures are absolutely in-cre-di-ble, Jeff. I'm currently looking into getting a 28mm for my M Typ240, but maybe I should stick with my 50mm. I bought my camera 6 years ago and felt I absolutely sucked at using a rangefinder so it's been collecting dust for the past 5 years. I recently decided to give it another go. 75% of the pictures I take are street photography. As I often venture out at dusk I tend to shoot with the lens wide open, often resulting in pictures that aren't the sharpest. I'll try to stop it down a tad and see where that takes me. Thanks for the tips!
I’m left eye 👁️ dominant. I was told that the best eye for my work is using the dominant one. But from the video I’ve just watched from Joel Meyerowitz, besides the benefits of using both eyes to take a better picture, it also demonstrated how the rangefinder cameras was designed initially for this purpose. So, my dilemma here is to get second opinion on which eye should be used for the viewing? Silvester
Sarah is also left eye dominant. The idea of using both eyes open is one of those things which doesn’t work for everyone due to the magnification of the viewfinder. Unless you get an M6 with a 0.85 mag. Then it works much better. The rangefinder design means the viewfinder will always be offset. So I guess Leica had to choose one side or the other, and as most people are right eye dominant, they chose that. You should always shoot with your dominant eye. Sarah always uses an external viewfinder so that she can look with both eyes if she needs to. I always work with one eye closed so there is no advantage to me in having the viewfinder to one side.
@@WalkLikeAlice Well said. I see. This reply makes me think for a long time. And I still have a little more to figure out. But I do appreciate your thoughtful and concise response. You’re a great mentor. Thanks.
Another brilliant video, I often use a 50mm for everything I shoot as I think it's so versatile, and only use my 21mm when I want to get close on the streets or my 135 for very certain shots. Will certainly try the from infinite to focus, not sure why I've never thought of that myself to be honest! I'm currently using the f/1.4 from TTA and I think it's great, but I do love the look of the Summarit-M f/2.4! - seen a few on eBay I like the look of, yes it not 1.4, but I shoot mainly at 5.6-8 anyway and they are so compact!
Hello Jeff, Super interesting video, thank you... I will explore the 50mm option myself. I am not sure I can express this correctly but I like the idea of more of the process being with me to try and compose/frame the photo... being a bit of a dinosaur I like to do the minimum of editing as I feel it changes a photograph to an image. I should say however if someone wants to take photo's or create images, I am fine with both, the most important thing is a pleasurable thing to look at. Many thanks for the video. Take care. Paul,,
My nifty 50 on Fuji is 35f2. It takes me back to film days when the 50 was the most affordable on my Konica and Nikon cameras. 😅Your beloved cameras have always been out of reach for me but I do not feel I missed out.😎
Great advice. I had the honor of meeting Ralph Gibson when I first started shooting seriously and he recommended I use exclusively a 50 mm for 2 years, which I pretty much did. On another note, I see guitars in the background (nice ones). As a guitarist myself (as is Gibson-that's how we met), I am amazed at how may photography RUclipsrs have guitars in the background. Notable player/photographers include, Gibson, Andy Summers, and Alan Schaller. What do you think is the connection, if any?
Coincidence. I think that we are attracted to things that are interesting to us so we notice them more. If someone put 1960s decorative glass in the background, Sarah would notice but I wouldn’t. My guitars are in my office so they are out of the way of the dog!! Otherwise they would be all over the house. Don’t forget Colin Greenwood, Bryan Adams, Jack White too.
I have sixty lenses and counting, mostly vintage primes, and most of those are 40, 50 and 55mm, i.e. "normal focal length". I just won an auction on eBay for an Auto Sears/Sekor SX 55mm f1.8 that some say was made by Tomioka. Maybe, maybe not, but it's an amazing lens. It produces wonderful colors and blur. It's supremely sharp and has the highly desirable characteristic of rendering volume, dimension, called 3D pop. The lens was poorly photographed by the seller, but it looked rough. When I got it, it looked worse, but it cleaned up really nicely. I also had to spend a few hours filing down the aperture ring (SX) so that it would mount flush with the camera. It was well worth it. Now, for $16.50 ($8.50 for the lens and $8 for shipping) I have a lens that would stand up to any.
@@WalkLikeAlice The vintage lenses are inexpensive. Most in very good condition probably cost me about $50 each and I've been collecting them since the seventies. Only a couple have cost me real money, an S-M-C Takumar 20mm f4.5 that I paid $230 for and a Minolta G 17-35mm f3.5 that I paid $400 for. Changing the lens on my camera keeps the photographic experience fresh. I'm always learning. I'm always challenged. The cameras I use are a Sony a7II and a Sony a850 DSLR, both of which I had to replace two years ago when they were stolen together with my most expensive Zeiss lenses which were not replaced, a 24mm f2 Distagon and a 16-80mm zoom. I really enjoy your content and your photographs are excellent. As others have mentioned, yours is a blog by a photographer for photographers. Thanks for your comment. As it happens I was just out with my new lens and took this photo that I think shows the lens' quality: [url=flic.kr/p/2pKdoYR][img]live.staticflickr.com/65535/53653926185_392a959b6b_b.jpg[/img][/url][url=flic.kr/p/2pKdoYR]The Troubadour[/url] by [url=www.flickr.com/photos/101244128@N07/]William Bolton[/url], on Flickr
I've always avoided watching this channel because of the name! Where did that come from? Now that I've watched and found the video interesting I have liked and subscribed! I'm a 'part of the scene' shooter' - now with a Leica Q3 which I love!
Thanks for the video. I guess we come at street photography from the opposite end of things. You camera and style is a lot of work. I prefer continuous auto focus and a zoom lens. Though I will try my 50mm Sony Lens to try out your concepts. Thanks.
Mate, that was so helpful. I love the perspective of the 50mm (my view), but it's less forgiving of my framing/compositional blunders than a '35 n crop..!'
For me, 50mm lens was the lens of maturity. 40 years ago, I was the happiest man in the world with my Minolta X500 and its 35-70 zoom lens. But after a long way with different brands and lenses, I currently shoot 95% of the time with a Lux 50 and a M10 monochrome or a M262. Nothing else. But it's only my pleasure and I understand that it can't suit everybody.
When I watch your videos, I feel like I am learning from a photographer rather than a RUclipsr or an Instagrammer. That is very appreciated. Well done.
Thank you. 🙏
Well said.
I echo this sentiment and just subscribed for that very reason. I’m actually learning vs someone just trying to gain a like, etc. Great tip at the end about manual focus. I have a vintage 50mm adapted to my 11-yr old Sony…it’s my favorite lens, but my primary concern was obtaining focus in time to not miss the shot. Peace.
Great tip about quick focusing using the hard stop of infinity...
I learned that one from back in the days of trying to manually focus a bride walking down the aisle with a 50mm.
@@WalkLikeAlice yeah I saw that in a video from Kai W and it makes a lot of sense with a rangefinder especially.
sounds like something from a marvel movie lmao
That infinity focus tip is absolute gold. Thank you for sharing it, and as always, another wonderful video.
Thank you. Glad it was useful. 🙏🙏
Looking at a scene vs being part of a scene - I've never thought about it like that. I like it.
Nice tip on starting manual focus with lens set at infinity to quickly find focus. I recently purchased the Fuji 33mm f1.4 lens & it has become one of my favourites. Tack sharp, with nice contrast & it is quick to find focus.
Glad you found it useful
I too love that Fuji 33 1.4, but I mostly use auto focus! The lens is fast enough, and I don’t need to worry about depth the field so much.
in the 90s, I worked for one of the biggest news magazines. two of our primary photographers never walked anywhere without at least one camera on them. they always kept 50mm lenses on those casual rigs that they just slung over their shoulder or around their neck.
I love my manual focus Nikon 50mm f/1.2. Renders absolutely beautifully. Have taken many of my best (most beautiful) street images with it.
After years of shooting 35 and 50, I've recently switched to 28 and 40 and it's been a great adjustment. 40mm is a great focal length to work with, but of course lens options and frame lines for it on RF cameras can be limited. I've been shooting with the Minolta CLE with 28/40 and I'm finding everything about it much more comfortable and suitable.
when i was shooting film with my pentaxk1000 i would constantly use sunny16 and set my manual lens to "zone focus" about 2-3 feet from my subject and it generally didn't let me down, of course i would minor tweak my focus
Found you via the podcast you did with Paul R. You already gave me a cool tip here about manual focussing. I just started picking up my old manual film kit again and so it's a really handy tip for me! I love what I've seen so far. Cheers, N
Thank you. Glad you found it useful.
Thank you for this video.
The choice of your lens is very personal. I see many RUclipsrs using 28 and even 24mm. Too wide for me. Sometimes I use a two body and lens setup so the 2nd Les is 85mm. I go back & forth between 35 & 50mm. The difference between the two is a step or two. Foot focus.
I usually frame my image with the EVF. When the scene is moving quickly I just point, shoot, and hope. The 35mm field of view is more forgiving. As you point out, the 50mm is about what I see so I have to be more precise. I don’t spray & pray but do take several shots when not using the EVF. I’m a digital shooter so there is no penalty for taking multiple images. I bet HCB would have appreciated having this option in his bag of tools.
Who says old dogs can’t learn new tricks? Normally I intend to produce tact sharp images. Recently I’ve been experimenting with intensional camera movement a la Ernst Haas. Last year I’d have said you blew the image at 4:53. Now I kind of like it. I know this has never happened to you. Occasionally I’ll make a mistake choosing a shutter speed such as when quickly taking the camera out of the bag (why was the camera in the bag?) to take the shot. Sometimes my setting get tossled when in the bag. I say a bad word or two but when I see the image I like it. I then tell my friends I intended to introduce the motion blur.
So there I am. Sometimes I play at being HCB and other times EH. I can get medicine for this kind of thinking.
Mask On Nurse Marty (Ret)
We’ve all made the mistake of getting a camera out of the bag and hearing that slow shutter speed 😂
“i feel im looking at a scene with a 50mm, and i feel im part of a scene with a 35mm”
what a great way to say it
50mm has always been my go to, it allows me to get close enough to my subjects without having to walk into them like a 35 or wider and it allows me to get more of my subject without cropping off their body or standing a mile away "kidding" with a tele photo, i always hear street photographers bashing 50 but for me, unless i'm amongst crowds of people "which is not that common in chicago" then it's not really necessary for me to go wide. I have a 7artisan 12 t 2.9 lens(crop with fuji xt4) for such occasions but i will always love 50! (35f2 crop 1.4x)
I’m the same way. I find getting interesting compositions with a 50 relatively easy, for exactly the reason described in the video: what your eye sees is what you get. You don’t have to reposition yourself to regain the composition you first imagined.
I also just don’t enjoy getting right into the personal space of strangers with a camera and snapping a picture, which I feel like I have to do a lot with a wide angle lens to prevent extraneous details in the frame, thus ruining the composition and minimizing the subject. As it is, I keep 50s on all my cameras except my F3, which sports a 35. I use my F3 exclusively for closer shots of friends and family, where I’ve got enough trust built up that I don’t have any reservation about getting close (and where the fact that it’s shutter noise is about ten times that of my M6 TTL is not a problem, for the same reason)
i like the hard stop tip on focusing. Thanks a lot.
Thank you. Today’s video is all about manual focus so it might be of further interest to you.
I have only recently found your channel but love your videos, very inspirational thank you!
Thank you. That’s very kind of you 🙏
what a great video. thx a lot and of course brilliant photos.
Thank you
I've gone from 28mm and 35mm and recently spent a bit of time with a 50. The initial experience was one of using a telephoto lens. Took a while to change my way of seeing things and framing.
Good video. I liked the infinity focus suggestion.
Thank you
Great tip on the manual focusing. I use a couple of vintage lenses a fair bit so will give this a try 👍
🙏
Worth watching for the speeding up manual focusing tip alone. Subscribed. Thank you.
Thanks for watching.
I totally agree with everything you have said - 50mm is a beautiful lens !!
Thank you
The 'beware of zombies' pic? Outstanding!
Thank you
Over the decades, I have used Nikon, Pentax, Fuji, and Miranda 50mm lenses on 35mm film SLR cameras. My personal favorite was the 8-element 50mm f/1.4 Takumar for the Pentax Spotmatic SLR.
The 50mm focal length on a full-frame body was my favorite for shooting live theatre.
You've made a good case for using a 50mm in street work. Food for thought.
It’s not the easiest.
Groovy riff on the 50mm world man. I'll be watching this video again. Thanks for reminding me that with a 50, my eye is the viewfinder. Also thanks for explaining why some of my lower-resolution sensors look sharper than the more pixel-packed ones. 12 and 16 MP can be stunning, and I've been wondering about this for quite a while.
You are very welcome. Thanks for watching.
A 50mm lens came with the first 35mm camera I purchased. I used it for about one year before I discovered that it was too “telephoto” for my taste. I replaced it with a 35mm f/2 and the 35mm became my favorite focal length for street photography, general subjects, and one-lens/one-camera situations.
When I purchased my Leica M6 rangefinder, the 35mm f/1.4 was the first lens I purchased.
Great advice mate and beautiful photos. Subscribed!
Thank you
The mother and daughter cigarette photo is hilarious. Glad that’s been captured.
First time I’ve heard this hard stop focusing tip from infinity down. Outstanding insight.
Thank you 🙏
Good tip on focusing, I use that technique myself.
👍
Great tips. I've always favoured 50mm but started using the Voigtlander 40mm f1.2 on my Sony and find that focal length very versatile. This is my first manual focus lens, and although there are limitations it's really not that difficult and makes me a bit more deliberate.
🙏🙏
Collapsible Summicron is my BW lens of choice. The “Bresson” if you will. It really does have a unique blend of contrast and resolution.
Great lens
Nice, comprehensive and nuanced summary on the 50mm focal length for street photography. I'd have said exactly all that in my same video on the 50 mm lens, if I made one. Also, I was a fan of 28 mm for a long time, thinking the 50 was too boring. But Cartier-Bresson's philosophy behind sticking to mostly 50 mm during all his career, and also his talented shots captured with this lens, made me rethink my views on this focal length. There is something great in the simplicity it provides, taking away all the 'special effects' of any optical distortion of wider lenses, only leaving you with your vision, talent and ability to capture interesting subjects as the only means to make a great photograph.
Thank you. Yes the simplicity of the lens is one of its greatest strengths.
Excellent advise. Useful and helpful.
Thank you for watching 🙏
Thanks for the tip on focusing starting at infinity, 99% of the time I shoot street at 28mm and zone focus but on other occasions shooting with the 50mm I have often pushed the focus tab the wrong way. Great content as always. 👍
Thank you
for all of my PJ work in college and the local newspaper and then in the Air Force one body always had a 35mm f2. another most often had an 85 f1.8. i just picked up a vintage Canon Model P and a 50mm f1.4 and ive done a little playing with it. i LOVE it. its hard to 'go to infinity' because if i go past it, theres a locking detent (i presume for 'locking' the lens during mounting and dismounting. i dont know for sure. it uses the L39 screw mount)
im hoping for some nice weather this weekend and week coming up. i want to go out and shoot another roll with it.
I’m not familiar with the lens. So I don’t know why there’s a lock on it. But I’m glad you like it.
Glad I discovered your video! I'm a long time nifty fifty lens shooter on a full-frame Nikon, and I love the NATURAL perspective although I also have a 24-70mm zoom lens: The 50mm lens ROCKS! :)
Another great video Jeff!
Thanks Kev
Great idea with the manuel focus,just bought the konica hexagon 40mm sure this will help me focus quick always great videos coming from you thanks
Thank you
Nice tip with the infinity focus click preset
Glad you found it useful
I don't shoot 50mm that often, yet I've accumulated three of them: two Voigtlanders and a Helios 58/2. Stopped down a bit, the Helios is as sharp as the Voigtlander APO 50/2. But it's a lens that really shines when shot wide open.
First look at this channel. That was a really good presentation & advocacy for any "normal" focal length lens in any format. The detail on the handling and focusing the 50 was insightful, great advice for learners. Great advocacy of the Normal!
Note that a fatter 50mm lens' longer focusing scale can be a plus, because it's easier to make a finer focus adjustment with more ring travel. Check out a Canon TS normal for the street, you can leave some rise locked in as you wander about, if you are into urban landscape.
Thanks for the comments. For me, the payoff with a larger lens is speed of focus and if you are shooting at f8, any additional accuracy is negated by depth of field. I had a Canon TS-E 45mm for a while.
Great video. 50mm is my Main Street lens as well. I have learned a certain distance and became out to shoot a summilux wide open with probably 80% success. I have also grow to now care as much about tack sharp images.
That takes some skill. I can do it with a 35.
@@WalkLikeAlice If I could do it with a .95 I would be very happy haha. Don't have one though so haven't tried. Everyone really appreciates the quality of your channel. Real Photographer Talk.
@@WalkLikeAlice I really love the 50 APO with the M11M for street. A little easier wide open.
your words are like poetry to me..thank you
😊
Focusing any manual focus lens with a focus tab… learn and internalise the positions of the tab in the distances you use most often… 5, 3, and 2m for example. It takes time and patience but is extremely effective 👌🏻
That’s ok if the lens has a focus tab. None of our 50s have them. Leica don’t tend to put them on longer larger lenses as it’s easy to use the focus ring. On the smaller lenses it becomes harder hence the focus tab.
Amazing stuff!
Thank you
OMG! Why did it take me this long to learn how to focus that way?
It. Just. Makes. Sense.
I was just telling my wife how I noticed today that the good majority of photos I’ve taken with a zoom lens, tend to land directly at 50mm. I’ve shot 50mm prime for so long that I must naturally gravitate to that focal length when I’m shooting with a zoom.
Glad you found it useful.
Thanks for the tip. I love my 50 summicron. I find my 50 noctilux heavy and unwieldy. Spends most of its time in the dry box. Haha. Thanks again
Ditto. It produces amazing results, but is really better suited to short walks ...
Yeah. It also blocks the viewfinder too much for street. You need a few seconds to check the framing all the time.
everything I was looking for on this subject! Thanks mate.
Thanks for watching 🙏🙏
28mm (Q2) is my preference I like to get close. I have just picked up a canon L3 body only so looked up some lenses I found a canon 50 1.8 cheap, so yup got that lovely lens, then an Elmar 5cm came up, with an M adapter apparently jammed onto it, so the selling price was cheap I couldn't resist as it looks awesome, a couple of rubber bands and a nip with long nose pliers got the adapter off, looking forward to shooting this new to me kit. I like the infinity stop tip cheers
🙏
Lot's of great tips again. Thanks.
Thanks for watching 🙏
The infiinty trick is great. I usually set to a focus range and go from there. I think I will try this and see how it goes. Thanks!
Cheers. Hope it works for you.
I'm finding my 33mm Fuji lens (50mm equivalent) SO much more challenging than my old 16-55mm (24-84mm), while walking around London trying to take characterful vignettes of people living their lives.
Like you say, it doesn't really do anything to the photos, and it can be hard to cut through the crowds when I have a fixed and slightly zoomy/tunnelvision focal length.
I'm determined to crack it, though, as I want to maximise the role of my subjects and composition (not lens distortion, bokeh etc) in making my photos good. So I feel like I'm genuinely capturing life as it is.
Watching from Tokyo..a beautiful morning... thank you
Thank you too 🙏
I've begun stepping outside of my comfort zone and using the 50mm on the street, and although it's still uncomfortable, I'm really liking the results!
I found shooting on the street with it quite a challenge. Still do!!
Thanks. A very good video. 50mm is often too limiting for my type of street photography. I prefer 35. It’s what you look for as a good image. Then you decide which lens suits you best. The lens should come second.
Great advice! Thank you. I did not know that there is a "hard stop" at infinity on my Leica lenses.
Thanks for the hard stop idea when using a 50mm. I find that I am checking too often that it is set to where I think it is and s/he who hestitates is lost so to speak. With the 35 and 28 I can usually set it and forget it.
Yeah the wides are easier. Thats for sure.
Focusing off the hard stop and reducing resolution settings on my M11 and Summicron without focus tab are great tips. And most importantly practice. It’s not a Q.
👍🙏
Great video!
Thank you
The version 3 50mm Summicron-M has both the short focus throw of the version 5 you are using, but has a focusing tab, which makes 'learning' the focus distance considerably easier. Worth finding one for yourself, IMHO.
Thanks, but I’m good. Quite happy with the lens I’ve already got. We’ve been on this earth together for 25 years. I know it inside out. 🙏
After 15 years shooting only with a 35mm summicron. I've added a 50mm to my kit. And it's been a fun process.
I was the other way round!!
Since decades 28mm is my preferred lens. Having enough „flesh“ around my subject i found another very fast and practical reason: You see a good situation in front of you and you have to adjust the proper framing - just step a bit forward into the scene - it‘s much easier and not so dangerous than to jump backwards. No eyes in the back of your head… I used 50 mm when the light was dim as in bars or arcades where the corners of frame became too dark with the slower wide angle lenses and not so important.
I don’t think I’ve ever jumped backwards on the street!!
I just found this channel, and subscribed before the video was finished. Good, useful information.
Thank you so much 🙏🙏
Great vid. I love using my 50mm at f2.0 on my M10, love the ethereal feel the shallow depth of field creates. But focusing is a nightmare. That turn to infinity trick is genius Jeff. Will definitely use that next time I'm out.
Thank you. It takes a little getting used to but it’s worth it in the end.
I'd be so glad if you made a video about your way of thinking when using a 50mm. Or maybe to analyze some of your 50mm photos.
I love your work btw.
Thank you. There are some 50mm videos in our Image of the week playlist. That might be worth a watch.
I have a 50mm lens for my Canon T6s but that camera is a crop sensor. I don't have one for either of my Nikon cameras. I just bought a used Canon AE-1 at a flea market with the 50mm lens with it. The glass looks in great shape. I plan to use black and white film in that camera. That will be a challenge for street photography. I'll have to be more deliberate with my shots and make every one count.
Great tips Jeff. I've always loved the 50mm and use it most often.
Thank you 🙏
Thanks Jeff, it helps a lot
🙏🙏
i have a leica q2. for street i go with autoISO, f8 and 1/250th of a second.
I use my Noctilux on a Canon R6II. I think the act of focusing is better than with a Leica body. I also have a focus tab ring on the lens that helps increase the rotation speed of the lens while focusing.
You won’t block the viewfinder either!!
@@WalkLikeAlice I always used a lens hood but it barely blocked the 50mm frame lines. The 35mm Summilux is almost as bad. Plus the weight balance with the Canon is much better.
Beautiful account, love thinking out of the box. ❤
Thank you 🙏
Great info thanks
Thanks for watching
Very well and insightful explained. Thank you!
🙏
Great Video - thanks for sharing your insights
Thank you for watching 🙏
I have the 50mm 0.95 Noctilux on the 45mp Nikon Z9 and I’m completely new to street photography. I love this lens so much but it has been the most difficult lens I have ever used. I normally use 85mm for most of my photography (portrait work most of the time) and I have used an autofocus 50mm f1.2 in the past, but not for street photography. So the manual focus Leica 50mm 0.95 Noctilux has been very challenging to say the least. On my first day using it last week, of the 165 shots I took, only 5 were in focus. And those were lucky shots. The next day I took about 120 shots of which only 3 were in focus. Mind you, none of the photos were interesting in any way as I was just trying to get anything at all in focus if possible. It was then that I realized that trying to take photos of moving subjects at f1.2 or even f2.0 was impossible. I’ve watched quite a few videos of some very talented people who somehow are able to excel at this type of photography. So it’s a big learning process for me. On the third day walking around the city for over 4 hours with the lens set to f8 I was not able to take a single photo as I couldn’t find anything interesting no matter where I looked. Sometimes I just wonder if it is by chance that something out of the ordinary has to happen for an interesting photo to be taken. Walking around with a Noctilux on a Z9 means nothing if you can’t use it 😂😂😂 On the fourth day I was walking to a friend’s house and along the way I saw a motorcycle chained to a metal inside the fence of a property. It was the back of a small house that looked very old and the odd part was that the rear of the house faced the street. But the way that the motorcycle was positioned it looked as it was a dead end in front of the motorcycle. It would have been the coolest looking photo ever. But I didn’t have my camera with me! The next day I went looking for the street where the house was but couldn’t find it.
50mm isn’t easy on the street. Especially a manual focus lens. It takes years of practice to become proficient with it. Just get out there and practice even if you don’t get anything meaningful, those hours will stack up and increase your understanding of the lens.
@@WalkLikeAlice with the manual focus 50mm Noctilux that I have do you recommend auto ISO, and what metering mode do you think is best? I like to shoot photos of people and currently I’m using the Matrix metering. Maybe I should switch to the Center Weighted or Spot Metering? I only use the camera outdoors during the day
@@dakotaxu4792 With the Z9, you could happily leave it on auto ISO and matrix metering. Spot metering is the worst thing you can do.
Not the first video of yours that I've watched, but this one made me subscribe. These pictures are absolutely in-cre-di-ble, Jeff. I'm currently looking into getting a 28mm for my M Typ240, but maybe I should stick with my 50mm. I bought my camera 6 years ago and felt I absolutely sucked at using a rangefinder so it's been collecting dust for the past 5 years. I recently decided to give it another go. 75% of the pictures I take are street photography. As I often venture out at dusk I tend to shoot with the lens wide open, often resulting in pictures that aren't the sharpest. I'll try to stop it down a tad and see where that takes me. Thanks for the tips!
Thank you 🙏
Just keep at it. Rangefinder focusing takes some getting used to and a lot of practice. It’s worth it in the end.
@@WalkLikeAlice Thanks for the encouraging words, Jeff!
brilliant!!
Best 50mm reflection thoughts I have seen so far, thx!
Thanks for watching.
I liked this one a lot...went back for seconds. But, you already know this.
Thank you
Literally percect help, thabks for your effort! 😊
🙏🙏 Thanks for watching
I’m left eye 👁️ dominant. I was told that the best eye for my work is using the dominant one.
But from the video I’ve just watched from Joel Meyerowitz, besides the benefits of using both eyes to take a better picture, it also demonstrated how the rangefinder cameras was designed initially for this purpose.
So, my dilemma here is to get second opinion on which eye should be used for the viewing?
Silvester
Sarah is also left eye dominant. The idea of using both eyes open is one of those things which doesn’t work for everyone due to the magnification of the viewfinder. Unless you get an M6 with a 0.85 mag. Then it works much better.
The rangefinder design means the viewfinder will always be offset. So I guess Leica had to choose one side or the other, and as most people are right eye dominant, they chose that.
You should always shoot with your dominant eye. Sarah always uses an external viewfinder so that she can look with both eyes if she needs to. I always work with one eye closed so there is no advantage to me in having the viewfinder to one side.
@@WalkLikeAlice Well said. I see. This reply makes me think for a long time. And I still have a little more to figure out. But I do appreciate your thoughtful and concise response. You’re a great mentor. Thanks.
@@WalkLikeAlice The video I’ve watched on RUclips is called:
Joel Meyerowitz - 'What you put in the frame determines the photograph'
good info, crystal clear, no BS, thanks
Thanks for watching
I shoot everything with a 50. Fashion, portrait, landscape, street.
Me too but mostly because I've spent so much money on it so I can't afford any other lenses lol
Another brilliant video, I often use a 50mm for everything I shoot as I think it's so versatile, and only use my 21mm when I want to get close on the streets or my 135 for very certain shots.
Will certainly try the from infinite to focus, not sure why I've never thought of that myself to be honest!
I'm currently using the f/1.4 from TTA and I think it's great, but I do love the look of the Summarit-M f/2.4! - seen a few on eBay I like the look of, yes it not 1.4, but I shoot mainly at 5.6-8 anyway and they are so compact!
Thanks Sebastian. Yeah that Summarit size is very appealing.
Hello Jeff,
Super interesting video, thank you... I will explore the 50mm option myself. I am not sure I can express this correctly but I like the idea of more of the process being with me to try and compose/frame the photo... being a bit of a dinosaur I like to do the minimum of editing as I feel it changes a photograph to an image. I should say however if someone wants to take photo's or create images, I am fine with both, the most important thing is a pleasurable thing to look at. Many thanks for the video.
Take care.
Paul,,
Thanks Paul. Take care.
My nifty 50 on Fuji is 35f2. It takes me back to film days when the 50 was the most affordable on my Konica and Nikon cameras. 😅Your beloved cameras have always been out of reach for me but I do not feel I missed out.😎
👍
Great advice. I had the honor of meeting Ralph Gibson when I first started shooting seriously and he recommended I use exclusively a 50 mm for 2 years, which I pretty much did. On another note, I see guitars in the background (nice ones). As a guitarist myself (as is Gibson-that's how we met), I am amazed at how may photography RUclipsrs have guitars in the background. Notable player/photographers include, Gibson, Andy Summers, and Alan Schaller. What do you think is the connection, if any?
Coincidence. I think that we are attracted to things that are interesting to us so we notice them more. If someone put 1960s decorative glass in the background, Sarah would notice but I wouldn’t. My guitars are in my office so they are out of the way of the dog!! Otherwise they would be all over the house. Don’t forget Colin Greenwood, Bryan Adams, Jack White too.
@@WalkLikeAlice Good point. Love the vids
@@WalkLikeAlice Agreed. I like cycling and notice whenever a photographer has a bike in the background, which is more often than you might think.
I have sixty lenses and counting, mostly vintage primes, and most of those are 40, 50 and 55mm, i.e. "normal focal length". I just won an auction on eBay for an Auto Sears/Sekor SX 55mm f1.8 that some say was made by Tomioka. Maybe, maybe not, but it's an amazing lens. It produces wonderful colors and blur. It's supremely sharp and has the highly desirable characteristic of rendering volume, dimension, called 3D pop. The lens was poorly photographed by the seller, but it looked rough. When I got it, it looked worse, but it cleaned up really nicely. I also had to spend a few hours filing down the aperture ring (SX) so that it would mount flush with the camera. It was well worth it. Now, for $16.50 ($8.50 for the lens and $8 for shipping) I have a lens that would stand up to any.
We would call that an addiction!! Great news on the lens. What are you mounting the lenses on?
@@WalkLikeAlice The vintage lenses are inexpensive. Most in very good condition probably cost me about $50 each and I've been collecting them since the seventies. Only a couple have cost me real money, an S-M-C Takumar 20mm f4.5 that I paid $230 for and a Minolta G 17-35mm f3.5 that I paid $400 for. Changing the lens on my camera keeps the photographic experience fresh. I'm always learning. I'm always challenged. The cameras I use are a Sony a7II and a Sony a850 DSLR, both of which I had to replace two years ago when they were stolen together with my most expensive Zeiss lenses which were not replaced, a 24mm f2 Distagon and a 16-80mm zoom.
I really enjoy your content and your photographs are excellent. As others have mentioned, yours is a blog by a photographer for photographers.
Thanks for your comment.
As it happens I was just out with my new lens and took this photo that I think shows the lens' quality: [url=flic.kr/p/2pKdoYR][img]live.staticflickr.com/65535/53653926185_392a959b6b_b.jpg[/img][/url][url=flic.kr/p/2pKdoYR]The Troubadour[/url] by [url=www.flickr.com/photos/101244128@N07/]William Bolton[/url], on Flickr
Great tips 👍🏻
Thank you
my favorite lens is pentax 28mm 3.5
I've always avoided watching this channel because of the name! Where did that come from? Now that I've watched and found the video interesting I have liked and subscribed! I'm a 'part of the scene' shooter' - now with a Leica Q3 which I love!
The channel name is from a quote by the late, great, Tony Ray-Jones. 🙂
@@WalkLikeAlice ah - sorry to say I'd never heard of him! Every day a school day etc .. .. ..
"through a looking glass" -all makes sense now - very clever
I'm so excited to see how the film photography is going - maybe I missed something?! anyway love your videos they are always great!
Thank you. Check out the community post I made on film photography.
@@WalkLikeAlice oh I see. Its too bad - hope you get to taking som rolls at some point though.
Thanks for the video. I guess we come at street photography from the opposite end of things. You camera and style is a lot of work. I prefer continuous auto focus and a zoom lens. Though I will try my 50mm Sony Lens to try out your concepts. Thanks.
Thanks for watching.
That was outstanding-and useful. Thx
Thank you for watching. Much appreciated.
Wow. Thank you for sharing
Thank you for watching
Thank you for the video!
🙏🙏
Mate, that was so helpful. I love the perspective of the 50mm (my view), but it's less forgiving of my framing/compositional blunders than a '35 n crop..!'
Thank you. Yes, you don’t get the same flexibility with the 50.
Have you ever had a Summarit 50? If so, can you tell about it? I've the 90/2.5, which I bought second hand. Stunning results. Keep on rolling.
I haven’t but I would be interested in one if I was buying again. The size alone would be appealing.
For me, 50mm lens was the lens of maturity. 40 years ago, I was the happiest man in the world with my Minolta X500 and its 35-70 zoom lens. But after a long way with different brands and lenses, I currently shoot 95% of the time with a Lux 50 and a M10 monochrome or a M262. Nothing else. But it's only my pleasure and I understand that it can't suit everybody.