35mm Macro Lenses

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  • ray_parkhurst
    Paid Member

    • Dec 2011
    • 1855

    #1

    35mm Macro Lenses

    There are a couple of 35mm macro lenses available that are useful for coin photography. Their main use is for higher magnifications, from 2:1 up to perhaps 6:1. Because they have adjustable apertures, they can do a good job for variety detail shots without focus stacking.

    The lenses I own in this category were both sold with the Polaroid MP3 or MP4 macro photography system. This was a large format system, so image quality over a large coverage area was required. This is a very different requirement versus microscope objectives, which were really only required to be sharp at the centers where live viewing was done. It is actually rare to find a microscope objective that has wide coverage and flat field.

    The lenses are:
    - Rodenstock 35mm f4 Eurygon
    - Tomioka 35mm f4 Tominon

    The lenses are small, like enlarger lenses, but because they are macro lenses, they do not need to be mounted in reverse. The MP3/MP4 systems were intended for use with large format lenses, so are threaded M40 x 0.75mm to mount into Copal-0 shutters. This means they need an M40 to M42 adapter for use with common bellows.

    I get about the same image quality from either of the lenses. At around 5:1 on APS-C, with f5.6, here are the images:

    Eurygon


    Tominon


    The sharpness is obviously not as good as a focus-stacked image taken with an M5 or similar objective, but was simpler to take since this is a single image, no stacking required. For many folks this would be good enough, even for variety identification. This coin has a very minor split lower serif, and it shows well at this magnification.
    Builder of Custom Coin Photography Setups. PM me with your needs or visit http://macrocoins.com
  • JC Stevens
    Paid Member

    • Feb 2011
    • 1103

    #2
    Thanks Ray!!
    Good judgment comes from experience, and a lotta that comes from bad judgment.

    Comment

    • jfines69
      Paid Member

      • Jun 2010
      • 28565

      #3
      Thanks Ray!!!
      Jim
      (A.K.A. Elmer Fudd) Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!

      Comment

      • VAB2013
        Forum Ambassador
        • Nov 2013
        • 12351

        #4
        Wow! Super Nice photos! But Ray... all of this camera talk is wayyyy over my head

        Comment

        • ray_parkhurst
          Paid Member

          • Dec 2011
          • 1855

          #5
          Yeah, there is a lot to learn. Being manual, most coin photo setups require a fair amount of knowledge to operate them. Good control and editing software (which is free with Canon cameras) helps a lot but you have to get all the settings right, and then the lighting. Lighting is actually 90% of the work. All the talk about the pure photography details are simple compared with getting the lighting right!
          Builder of Custom Coin Photography Setups. PM me with your needs or visit http://macrocoins.com

          Comment

          • stoneman227
            Member
            • Jun 2012
            • 2086

            #6
            The Tominon is what I use for my detail shots, it is a nice little lense.

            John
            So sad ... My reverse consumption engine was a broken fuel gauge ... gonna look at coins now. John

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