Thanks, Lee
I am not trying to be funny, but is it possible the wind was blowing the top of the
trees?
John
There are only a few elements that will cause blurred images. My first
guess is that maybe there was a wind that caused the trees to move
during the exposure. Was the exposure slower than 1/60th of a second?
If it was, maybe you moved the camera. Back or front light will not
cause a blurred image. I would try testing the camera with it on a
solid tripod and take several images to eliminate camera shake as a
cause.
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
Given that the bluring is against the bright area, I'd suspect flare.
Are you by any chance using a filter over the lens?
My first impression also, but the words "very blurred" got me thinking
about folding cameras. Is it possible that the mechanism is not locking
the lens completely in the parallel position? My bet is that something
is preventing proper alignment.
dr bob.
I would agree with you if he had said the blurring was only in vertical or
horizontal format. He said it was the same in either position. That would
indicate something other than the lens axis not being perpendicular to the
film plane (otherwise the image would be blurred on the right or left when
changing from one format to another. I would have to say it was the movement
of the trees causing the blurring.
Richard
If this were the cause, wouldn't the blurring be moved to the left or right
side of the image when the camera is turned from hor. to vert. position? If
Lee's pictures are blurred on the top side, regardless of the position of
the camera, I think we only have two causes left: wind or over-exposure of
the sky causing haze.
Jan
The picture was taken at 1/30 sec. at f/3.4 (i.e, wide open) focused at
infinity. I was using a monopod, and I have dismissed camera shake as a
possibility because the non-back lit portions of the photos are extremely
sharp. There was also no noticeable wind, and I doubt it was because the camera
was not fully opened because in the vertical shots, the blurred portion was
still at the top of the photo.
I do not know enough about flare to know if that could cause the problem.
However, there was no sunlight, and the sky was deep overcast.
I have examined some photos taken with this camera of other subjects, and they
are sharp corner to corner, even enlarged to 16x20.
Thanks for your help in trying to figure this one out.
Might you have tree branches hanging down in front from other trees that
are closer than the hyperfocal distance for extreme sharpness - maybe only
20-30 feet away.
Are far-away branches against the sky sharp?
--
Nicholas O. Lindan, Cleveland, Ohio noli...@ix.netcom.com
Technical Management Consulting & Engineering Services:
New Product Development; Electrical Engineering;
Software, System and Circuit Design. Oh, & Photography
1/30 sec for a view camera?????? On monopod??????????????????????????????/
Below 1/250 you HAVE to have unsharp photos..
--
-----
St.
LeSabre
(Stanislaw B.A. Stawowy)
http://www.geocities.com/Stanislaw_Stawowy
Were you or were you not using a filter over the lens? Given the
unsharpness is of relatively fine objects in the bright-sky area I
stand by my guess that the problem is flare - either at the lens
(possibly exacerbated by a filter) or possibly halation at the
emulsion. Maybe both.
I was not using a filter, and the blurred branches were far enough away that I
do not think it was a DOF problem. I am inclined to think that it is a flare
problem, but I do not really know enough about flare to say for sure.