Equipment and Materials used – The Lens

A SOLIGOR F2.5 24MM

I do own a 50mm as well as a 135mm, but to be honest I never use them. I fell in love with the 24mm which at the time belonged to my father. He eventually gave in and let me keep it after a year or so of continuous borrowing – It’s a Soligor F2.5, 55ø. I still use it and will hopefully be able to go on using it…I have dropped it a few too many times, but it’s still going strong after twenty years.

The 24mm to me is the perfect lens, not too wide but wide enough to allow you to play with the geometry within a frame and to have fun with the composition. I never seem to tire of the variety it offers me and the way I can so easily create both dramatic and subtle moods with the framing.

It is also important for me to always use prime lenses as it is too easy to become lazy when using a zoom. In the well known words of Robert Capa: “if your pictures aren’t good enough, you aren’t close enough.”

THINGS TO LOOK OUT FOR IF BUYING A SECOND HAND MANUAL LENS:

Check for a smooth and fluid movement on the focus ring, and be especially aware of the possibility of sand in the mechanisms. Hold the lens up to the light and open the aperture right up and look for scratches, damage or mould on the elements. Then while still looking through the lens close the iris step by step making sure it works smoothly and consistently. Finally make sure the contacts on the back of the lens are clean and if there is a small spring loaded lever there, then make sure that is working too.

Whenever you can buy a lens with as wide an aperture as possible. Often this will mean it is more expensive but it will be worth it in the long run.

Latest

Swarm

It was as simple as ‘get to the top of Finland and turn left’.  At least that is

Blink and you’ll miss it

Iceland. Never has the essence of a country so closely resembled the way in which I see the

Under the Stars in Madagascar

There are times when writing about memories from as far back as my eighteenth year feels wrong. How

Viewpoints

The Rooftop Collective exhibition edition VI Tempus Fugit. So they say. Here we are again, another Rooftop Collective

Memories

Five Minute Windows

After driving over 7000km in nine days around Scandinavia it was the morning of my last day. I

Parading through a warzone

India 19-03-11: “You cannot go down there.” And who was I to argue with two uniformed policemen? This

Alter Egos in the Dunes

I have often wondered what it was in particular that attracted me to photography. What it was that

Putting Your Foot In It

Some things in life are constant. As babies we grow into childhood, dependant on certain things not changing.

Randomly Selected

Half a Mile from Russia

I do not know whether it is because of the generation I am from or whether Russia does

Photographing Photographs

Swept along by Katrina Aleksa of Predella House: I’m sat, once again, in a taxi, frames stacked up

Stripping away the Gimmicks

Next time you come across a photograph you think is good, try this basic exercise. Simply question why

The Olympic Games in Berlin 1938 – by Barbara Wace

Written by Barbara in April 1995: I worked as a short hand typist at the British Embassy in