PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
A high performance telephoto lens well suited for stage, portraiture photography and travel, sports or documentary work. This lens incorporates glass with a higher index of refraction and boasts a lens composition of seven air-spaced elements. With the employment of the Rear-group focusing system, focusing is smooth and easy and lens balance is maintained.Looking through the viewfinder with a 200mm lens attached to your camera for the first time is an exciting experience. With magnification that fills the 35mm frame with an area 1/16th of that covered by a 50mm lens, the 200mm figuratively reaches out to create eye-arresting images. With a diagonal angle of view of only 12", it is an extremely versatile lens. One of the bigger advantages is the comfortable working distance over the subject you are shooting that it provides.
Product
SN: ****9
Condition: Excellent
Warranty: 2 weeks shop warranty, covering manufactural defects
What You Will Get
- Front Cap
- Rear Cap
Medium Format
Medium format refers to the size of your roll of film (or if you’re talking digital, it’s the size of the camera sensor). It really just means that you are shooting on a bigger piece of film than you do with a 35mm camera. The increased size of medium format film means a much larger negative. This will give you finer details and less grain.
Choosing your Right Medium Format Camera
Twin Lens Reflex (TLRS)
TLRs use two objective lens of the same focal length. The photographic objective lens is the one that is used to take the picture. The other lens, called the view lens, is connected to the viewfinder. Most TLRs are fixed focal length, and the more expensive models may incorporate a rudimentary room function. Most TLRs use a leaf shutter system, resulting in high speeds, quiet operation and low shutter vibration. There are also close-up, wide angle and telephoto adapters for TLRs.
Some popular TLRS cameras are: Yashica MAT-124G, Rolleiflex 2.8F, Minolta Autocord and Mamiya C330
Rangefinder
Rangefinder cameras are medium format cameras with a range finder. This negates the waistline, viewing that most TLRs carry. They are also much smaller than TLRs, and allow for easier point and shoot photographs. They tend to have limited focusing ranges, and do not have lenses larger than 180mm or 200mm. Rangefinders are quieter and easier to focus in dim light. They are mostly fixed lens models, but higher range models also provide for interchangeability.
Some popular rangefinder cameras are: Fujica G690, Mamiya 6/7, Bronica RF645, Norita 66 and Pentax 67
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