Vintage Fisheye Lenses

My vintage Asahi Takumar 17mm f/4 fisheye lens is one of my favorite staples. I often use it for concert photography:

The great Mock Identity playing Rhizome in DC.

The great Mock Identity playing Rhizome in DC.

November, 2018. This was the first ever public performance of the band that would be later named Coriky. This wasn’t the first time that Fugazi members Ian MacKaye and Joe Lally were photographed with a Takumar fisheye lens. Back in the day, that wa…

November, 2018. This was the first ever public performance of the band that would be later named Coriky. This wasn’t the first time that Fugazi members Ian MacKaye and Joe Lally were photographed with a Takumar fisheye lens. Back in the day, that was one of the lenses of choice of punk/rop/rap photographer Glenn Friedman, who got his start shooting with Pentax film cameras.

Most of the best concert shots are taken within feet of the band. Here Lyris from T-Rextasy is leaning into me and I love the scale of the bit of her sneaker that is visible.

Most of the best concert shots are taken within feet of the band. Here Lyris from T-Rextasy is leaning into me and I love the scale of the bit of her sneaker that is visible.

You may be wondering why I’d want to use an f/4 lens for concert photography when concerts tend to be so darned dark. With other focal lengths, there’s no way I would want an f/4. With a fisheye, I feel like I can get away with a noisier high-ISO photo. I’m trying to capture the overall energy of the moment and I’m not looking for the same type of optical quality that I would want from a 50mm. Fisheyes, or at the very least a very wide lens, are a must for me for concert shooting because I always try to get a shot or two of the band as a whole where all members are in frame.

But there are other quite useful applications for fisheyes! In September, I covered the opening of a new section of the Kennedy Center. I knew I would be shooting a lot of interiors and I knew some might be tight, so I brought the Takumar. While I was interested in using the fisheye’s wide angle to capture smaller interiors, I wasn’t interested in distracting readers with the fisheye look. There’s an easy fix for that when editing photos in Lightroom. You’ve probably used “Enable Profile Corrections” when Lightroom or Photoshop knows and recognizes the lens. In Lightroom, you can also manually select a lens profile and apply it to any photo. The Takumar 17mm isn’t in the Lightroom library, but that doesn’t matter. I simply sampled other lens profiles until I found one that was a good fit. An example of the results:

I pulled out the fisheye to fit the stairs and space into the frame, but a photo like this would seem quite out of place in a news story. So, run the the photo through some Lightroom correction profiles and…

I pulled out the fisheye to fit the stairs and space into the frame, but a photo like this would seem quite out of place in a news story. So, run the the photo through some Lightroom correction profiles and…

Voila! People will know just what they’re looking at without being weirded out.

Voila! People will know just what they’re looking at without being weirded out.

It’s not exactly technically complex architectural photography, but it’s an easy way to add flexibility for what types of shot a vintage lens produces. The point is that an old fisheye can give you the perfect aesthetic for things like a band shot, but they can also easily be used to produce more standard looking shots. That’s why I so often keep one in my bag!

Trump Protests

For all that's happened over the last few weeks that I've disliked, I can at least say it's been interesting living in Washington, DC. I slept in for the actual inauguration, but as someone who was packed in tight over a mile and a half away as I watched President Obama's first inauguration from near the Washington Monument, I can assure you that the crowds this time were indeed quite small. But I did make it out that night to the anti-inaugural ball at one of DC's best music venues, Black Cat. This was a fundraiser for the wonderful groups Casa Ruby and One DC. Over a dozen acts played, including hometown heroes Priests...

This was taken with my latest lens - a vintage JC Penny (!) 28mm f/2.8 lens Minolta mount (which I adapted onto a Sony a7sii), bought for $11 on eBay. These "brand" lenses were typically really made by legit lens or optics companies, and I'm quite happy with the glass in this one. Note the slender snake-like lens flares.

But on to the protests, which started the next day with the wonderful Women's March on Washington...

Taken with my trusty Helios 44-2 58mm f/2, which is a lens I will always keep coming back to. It's easy to find one for less than $50 - I don't know of any better bargain in lenses out there. Shutter: 125, ISO: 250, Aperture: Probably around f/8.

The beautiful architecture of the new African American Museum made for a nice frame here. Helios 44-2. Shutter: 200, ISO: 100, Aperture: Somewhere around 5 - with the Helios click-stop aperture ring, I'll often float between the set stops.

Note the great arm tattoo - "I love you." I didn't know this person and wouldn't have felt comfortable taking such a close shot at this angle, but my friend had asked if photographs were ok and they they said yes. I still cropped the bottom a bit so I could comply with Instagram's absurd no-nipples rule. Helios 44-2. Shutter: 1/200, ISO: 400, Aperture around f/4.

That was a special and powerful day, but what you may not have seen on the news is that smaller but still sizable protests have been almost daily since then. This one was taken 4 days after the Women's March, on January 25, when rumors of the travel ban were swirling. The travel ban was issued two days later.

Just outside the White House. The Sony Zeiss 55mm f/1.8. Shutter: 1/100, ISO 3200, Aperture: f/1.8. This is the only native lens for my a7sii I own, and the only one I'm interested in owning at the moment. I'm usually not one to chase sharpness, but I do love how sharp it is at faster apertures.

On January 29, the day after the travel ban took effect, there was a large protest that moved between the White House and a few blocks away at the newly opened Trump Hotel. These shots I took with the Asahi Takumar 85mm f/1.9.

Near the White House. Asahi Takumar 85mm f/1.9. Shutter: 1/400, ISO: 125, Aperture around f/2.8.

It was quite a sight seeing such a crowd outside the hotel's door. Asahi Takumar 85mm f/1.9. Shutter: 1/250, ISO: 200, Aperture around f/4.

Not sure how someone managed this given all the police and security that were around. I suppose they had allies crowd around them while they worked. The moment the protest broke up, workers came out and got to work on removing it. Asahi Takumar 85mm f/1.9. Shutter: 1/400, ISO: 160, Aperture: around f/2.8.

Walking up Pennsylvania Avenue. Asahi Takumar 85mm f/1.9. Shutter: 1/400, ISO: 160, Aperture around f/7.1.

Asahi Takumar 85mm f/1.9. Shutter: 1/400, ISO: 160, Aperture looks fairly open, maybe f/4 or so.

Dupont Circle in the USA Today

I was happy that USA Today used two of my shots of the Dupont Circle fountain in this terrific article about the efforts to revitalize the Dupont Underground.

Dupont Circle is my favorite spot in DC to start photographic walks from. It's equidistant from some of the District's most photogenic neighborhood -- Georgetown, Adams Morgan, and the U Street corridor to name a few. And the Dupont Circle neighborhood itself is a great mix of DC's culture and classic architecture.