privatebydesign said:
Tinky said:
That way you could have a 135 format sensor mirrorless (if you wanted such a thing) giving you a nice large sensor for straight photography with your ef (or adapted ef) lenses, , but when you start shifting a crop could be introduced relative to the shift.. in that if you shift 1mm you are going to need to use less cropping than if you use 9mm?
That is exactly the same thing as cropping in post, no need for a fancy shifting adapter to do that.
No. It is not.
Either you don't understand ts lenses or you have misread my post.
I am not talking about simply cropping. I am talking about shifting and cropping.
If you crop within the same image projection it is a basic crop.
If you shift the image projection (by shifting the lens) you are projecting a different image, and cropping that.
Do you
see the difference? Do you
understand the difference?
(
I can use fancy colours too you know!)
An
Xmm optical shift of the lens does not equate directly to an
Xmm shift in the borders of the field of view, (unless, say, you are using a life size macro lens)
I concede that my idea is a little bit far-fetched.. but it would avoid an automatic 'hard' crop, which for some, might also be a little far fetched.
The issue it seeks to solve is that the projected image circle of a given EF lens is going to be less usable at the borders of the circle, but it's not always going to be 1.6x less usable, and certainly not at minor shifts.
Of course, we could take your advice, and just do everything in photoshop, haha!
Seriously though, I can't help but think the folk who need TS lenses would just buy the tool for the job, and occassional users or one-offs would be better just to hire. We are assuming an EF-m mount, but this could be an industrial application device to go with the industrial high-iso cameras and high MP chips we have seen recently (remember that the high MP chip was APS-H... would give some scope for shift)
I've toyed with the m42/EF-m TS mount made by Kippon, but even it is expensive (for an unknown quantity) and then you've the cost of tracking down WA and UWA optics in good conditions, but often putting up with old nasty shaped oily diaphragms, scratched or mouldy coatings and optics etc...