agierke said:you can effectively increase the angle of view (or coverage) from the 24mm TS so that it can be used in tighter spaces.
simply orient the lens so that the movement becomes a rise/fall and shoot two frames. first frame should be the top most composition of the scene and then second the lower portion of the scene. you then copy and paste the two frames on top of each other, reposition, and erase the overlap. this also works in a vertical orientation though i personally found it much easier to work as a horizontal. a fairly simple work around that increases the usability of an already fantastic lens.
2 immediate benefits to this technique is that you are effectively increasing the field of view without expanding the spacial relationship of the background/foreground (something the 17mmwould certainly increase significantly). second, you are also increasing the resolution of your final image to roughly 1.5x (depending on your execution of the technique) the native camera resolution.
the only thing you have to be mindful of is that you do encounter a bit of parallax in the upper portion of the composition so overlapping and erasing should be done with care. also, you need to be mindful of the limits of the image circle and not push the rise/fall to its extreme or you will encounter vignetting in the center portion of your final merged composition. i guess another consideration is that you are changing the final aspect ratio away from the 8x12 native full frame format so some additional cropping of the final composition isnt uncommon if a more common output size is required (ie an 8x10).
does this technique negate the need for the 17mm T/S? no...but if you already have the 24mm T/S you may find that you can get by without dropping another 2k.
^^You raise some good points.
I too, find the ultra wide focal range to be less useful, in general. But something about the 17mm gets me excited, and I think it's the prospect of getting ultra-wide shots with more control over distortion/perspective. The 24mm length on both my 16-35mm and 24-105mm are satisfactory for my purposes. They are great. I don't feel like I need to spend $2k to improve my 24mm shots. It's close enough. Obviously, I wouldn't mind having all the 24mms, but my budget isn't unlimited.
The reason I started this thread is that I'm not very enthused about the 16mm length on my 16-35mm. And I think it's the distortion/perspective. Who knows... maybe it's all in my head. But I've seen lots of 17mm TS-E shots that look more "realistic" to me than anything I can get with my 16-35mm. I really enjoy wide-angle photography, but the wide end of my 16-35mm has me wanting more. And so that leaves me with either the 14mm or the 17mm TS-E.
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