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Forum: Lens Sample Photo Archive 11-17-2016, 12:39 PM  
Pentax HD D-FA 28-105mm f/3.5-5.6
Posted By UrmoP
Replies: 170
Views: 23,217
Although this lens is so called kit lens for K-1, it is really impressive. I really love it. Big minus is that this lens does not have focusing scale. Quite hard is to focus at night. But overall, really good one for this value.

So some shots from me with K-1.
Forum: Post Your Photos! 10-29-2016, 09:56 AM  
Nature Indigo Bunting
Posted By wildman
Replies: 1
Views: 640
Model PENTAX *ist DL
Shutter Speed 1/125 s
F-Number f/7.1
ISO ISO 200
Exposure Bias Value 1.30 eV
Metering Mode Center weighted average
Flash Off, Did not fire
Focal Length 560 mm
Lens Model M-42 or No Lens
Date/Time Original 5/15/2008 6:59:02 PM
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 10-17-2016, 10:44 AM  
The Bokeh Club
Posted By normhead
Replies: 25,987
Views: 2,367,876
A few from this morning.
Tamron SP 300mm ƒ2,8 and HD DA 1.4 TC
400 ISO, ƒ4.5







Forum: Post Your Photos! 09-19-2016, 10:59 PM  
Nature Looking back to the K-3
Posted By Peter Nutkins
Replies: 22
Views: 1,970
Red in the mist by Peter Nutkins, on Flickr

Not able to go out at the weekend and take some shots I looked through my images from last year when I had my K-3. This shot was taken with the 35mm Limited macro lens.

I love my K-1 but darn that K-3 is a good camera! :)
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 07-12-2016, 10:13 PM  
The Bokeh Club
Posted By LeRolls
Replies: 25,987
Views: 2,367,876
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 07-10-2016, 02:13 PM  
The Bokeh Club
Posted By pepperberry farm
Replies: 25,987
Views: 2,367,876
Forum: Post Your Photos! 07-05-2016, 09:20 AM  
Nature Peter Hurley Style Portrait
Posted By Kerrowdown
Replies: 19
Views: 1,983
A Lady of style... not to be confused with my "Ladies", albeit a "Duchess" was involved in the making of this image. :lol::lol::lol:
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 07-03-2016, 02:57 AM  
The Bokeh Club
Posted By pepperberry farm
Replies: 25,987
Views: 2,367,876
Forum: Post Your Photos! 07-02-2016, 10:08 AM  
Macro Macros from the rain forest
Posted By Urs
Replies: 11
Views: 873
A few macros from Panama, this is only a tiny little glimps into the huge biodiversity to be discovered in the local rain forests. A collectopn of images taken over the years , dating back to the K100 to K20, K7 and now K5 & a variety of lenses used.
Forum: Post Your Photos! 07-01-2016, 02:36 AM  
Cityscape Storm over Kielce.
Posted By Artgraf1981
Replies: 3
Views: 696
Few shots from yesterday storm.



Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 05-24-2016, 01:22 AM  
The Bokeh Club
Posted By ogl
Replies: 25,987
Views: 2,367,876

dfa100 macro
f4

---------- Post added 05-24-2016 at 01:23 AM ----------



---------- Post added 05-24-2016 at 01:24 AM ----------

3.5



---------- Post added 05-24-2016 at 01:29 AM ----------

f5


---------- Post added 05-24-2016 at 01:38 AM ----------


dfa100 f2.8
Forum: Pentax K-1 & K-1 II 05-05-2016, 07:41 PM  
Post your K-1 pictures!
Posted By Mock
Replies: 38,125
Views: 3,752,737
Processed, always. The ladder and cables also have vignette added, if you're curious.
Forum: Photographic Technique 10-28-2015, 11:55 AM  
Insects in the fields: Macro 100mm 2.8 or DA*300mm 4 ?
Posted By BrianR
Replies: 18
Views: 3,197
I haven't had a chance to try the DA*300mm on insects yet, but the added working distance over the 100mm macro should be great for the larger ones that are more skittish. I'll keep those Canon close-up filters in mind.


I've been pretty happy with the 100mm vs. many different insects. I'm generally not too picky about shooting a specific species and am still happy with the ones that do let me approach. Added working distance should give more opportunities, but spending some time hiding in the flowers waiting for stuff to come to you works pretty well. The one below (and a few others) were taken over a half our of sitting still while they flew around me. This wasn't my first half hour sitting still waiting for these guys though:). A comfy low stool is an important piece of kit:lol:.

---------- Post added 10-28-15 at 02:57 PM ----------



Congrats on photographing this elusive species:). Very pretty and I'm glad you're finding insect success with your 300mm!
Forum: Video Recording and Processing 10-14-2015, 02:18 AM  
Timelapse with K-01
Posted By madhurvyas
Replies: 1
Views: 1,185
Inspired by few other timelapse in this forum I created one myself. Mostly clouds, sunset, moonrise and night sky.
All done with K-01, my first timelapse, edited with kdenlive.















You Tube



Forum: Pentax News and Rumors 09-30-2015, 12:26 PM  
Pentax FF spring 2016
Posted By rullrich
Replies: 967
Views: 113,433
So basically this thread is going this way: everything is lost and invain. All those top pundits around here advice me (and foremost themselves it seems) that now it's definitely time to jump ship. The story goes that RICOH absolutely has no idea of the dslr-market, has no idea where to move next, which product to develop and so on. If they only would listen to Uluru and the likes, they already have the answers ready. Unfortunately their don't run a global company on their own, but this detail is of minor concern and can be neglected. These days it's really hard to stand whats written in here. Please people, get happy again, even if this means you have to buy Nikon or Canon or Sony, really, the others don't mind, even if you think so. You are grown ups, you can buy whatever you like, even if it's non-Pentax gear, nobody cares. But please don't tell everybody else that it's useless to adhere to Pentax. Those who do for whatever reason are grown-ups as well who know what to do (I hope at least)!
Forum: Film SLRs and Compact Film Cameras 09-23-2015, 04:34 AM  
Children of the digital age, LOL.
Posted By pathdoc
Replies: 12
Views: 1,392
So this morning I took a picture of the kids with my new (to me) Spotmatic, and Miss Four wanted to see the picture - and who can blame her, when she's grown up around my K-5?

I told her no, this is one of my film cameras (she already knows what those are), and Master Six (who knows equally well, since I've let him help me load and unload one) said the immortal words:

"You have to take it out and download the film."

Which, considering he never has seen and probably never will see a rapid-process (film) photo lab, is not too bad for that age!

I must try to show them one, next time we're in a big city.
Forum: Pentax K-3 & K-3 II 08-23-2015, 07:51 AM  
Mobile Mag mentions k-3
Posted By MadMathMind
Replies: 4
Views: 1,518
Were you expecting big things from an article that misspells "Canon" throughout it?

Maybe a Cannon camera is something like this?
Forum: Pentax Q 07-07-2015, 03:59 PM  
Underwater shots with the Pentax Q7
Posted By joachimhs
Replies: 9
Views: 3,868
Hello again,

I just finished my second dive with the Penta Q7 and 5-15mm lens. You might be wondering how I got the Q7 underwater in the first place. You can get more details on my approach in this thread here: https://www.pentaxforums.com/forums/136-pentax-q/224428-underwater-housing-q.html#post3295250

We went diving fairly late today, and the sun disappeared behind a thick layer of clouds. Combined with a visibility of 5-7 meters, this essentially made the dive a night-dive. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but I need to upgrade my underwater flashlight in order to get more photo light into the photographs.

Overall the Q7 is an OK underwater camera. Its certainly NOT an SLR, but it is far from a slow compact too. I am planning on purchasing the 8,5mm prime lens, which I think will be a better fit underwater.

The dive today was very good, and lasted for about 45 minutes at depths of 26 meters.

But... Moving on to the photographs, which have all been post processed in Adobe Lightroom. Overall I was quite pleased with how the photographs turned out!

Comments and critique is very much appreciated!

I was quite pleased with how these anemones came out. This was the look I was going for, so spot on. 2 slightly different versions




This was huge, about twice as large as any other sea urchins I've seen in the area. Lit up from the side with the flashlight


I think this is a Grey gurnard fish. Its head is about the size of my fist. First time I've seen one on a dive :)


We where lucky enough to see a lobster. This one was quite large, the largest I've seen while diving in Norway. It wasn't as happy to see us, as we where to see it, though :)


Thank you for watching! These and others are part of my Underwater gallery: Zenfolio | Joachim Haagen Skeie | Underwater
Forum: General Photography 06-18-2015, 12:10 PM  
On the merits of the imperfect image.
Posted By MD Optofonik
Replies: 10
Views: 1,347
Film emulation to create "vintage" looks and emulate grain, using old glass that is flare prone or has any number of spherical aberrations, 70's fixed lens rangefinders, Holga and Diana Lomography; the many ways people are introducing imperfections into what could otherwise be pristine digital images for output and upload have proliferated both amateur and professional photography for several years now. I've thought about this a bit and finally formed, what is for me, a concise conclusion.


Imperfections introduced to an image, by design or providence, mirror the imperfections in our memory. It is the nature of memory to lose some detail and fade a bit with time. As time passes, a photograph that mimics such characteristics allow our memory some space to fill out the missing details with our own interpretation of a given time and place in the past, however accurate or inaccurate we desire. Such images, created with silver or silicon, are truly analog in their relationship to how humans interpret memories and how we wish to perceive ourselves and our relationship to the time, the place, and the people that create our personal histories; that create our humanity. The embrace of imperfection in this digital era is not a here-today-gone-tomorrow hipster trend. The embrace and allure of the imperfect image is here to stay as long as we are, It's an extension of our biology, an analog to our human nature in a world that is increasingly non-analogous to our humanity.


I'm just sayin'.
Forum: Pentax SLR Lens Discussion 06-17-2015, 07:43 AM  
Professional Lenses
Posted By MrPetrone325
Replies: 34
Views: 4,400
I appreciate everyone's recommendations, but there seems to be a running theme that bothers me whenever I look at any post asking for lens recommendations. 1. There is such a thing as a "professional" lens. If there wasn't, no one would shell out the money to buy better glass, they'd just stick with their kit lenses and be happy. 2. Just because I am looking to upgrade some of my gear does not mean that I don't know what I'm doing or that I am not pleased with the results I am already getting. You don't know me or anything about the things I have accomplished as a photographer. 3. Conversely, just because someone gets fantastic results using a cheap, garbage lens does not mean that they would not get even better results using some of the high quality glass that is available to us.

I hope that this reply has not offended anyone, but at the same time, I am a little offended when people assume I don't know what I'm doing because I want to upgrade a few of my lenses.

---------- Post added 06-17-15 at 11:23 AM ----------


I mainly shoot outdoors, portraits and landscapes alike, although I prefer shooting landscapes. I do some studio work as well.
Forum: Photographic Industry and Professionals 05-16-2015, 08:19 AM  
Google ≠ Free
Posted By johnmflores
Replies: 17
Views: 2,853
I've had one photo in particular stolen so many times that I decided to write a story about it....

The Story of a Photo (AKA Google ≠ Free) | johnmflores
Forum: Photographic Technique 02-26-2015, 05:34 AM  
Macro Anyone have a Venus 60mm f2.8 2X macro lens?
Posted By Not a Number
Replies: 49
Views: 9,482
As stated on the manufacturers website the intent was to design a macro lens with 2x that does not need the inconvenience of having to use tubes, bellows, diopter lenses or reverse rings.



Using tubes is great. But suppose you need something in-between 0.5x and 2x. You have to change tubes and even then with a ordinary prime lens you may not be able to get the in-between magnification you want for the best composition. Your magnification choices are limited in fixed steps And while you are juggling lens, canera bidy, and tubes the subject has flown away.

I can get infinity focus using my bellows and a 100mm bellows lens but the best magnification I can get is about 1.2x. If I add tubes I can get more magnification but I lose infinity focus. And to get 2x with a 100mm lens I'd need about 200mm of extension - very cumbersome and the loss of light is enormous. With bellows I lose the aperture control lever unless I have the auto bellows. Even then I have to stop-down manually with the button or cable release. And bellows are very bulky, cumbersome and fragile - not something I want to take in the field very often.

To quote Thomas Shahan once again: "Any tool that can get me closer to the subjects I care about - more easily - is worth it."
Forum: Pentax Full Frame 02-26-2015, 02:48 AM  
Full Frame: The Real Pros (and Cons?)
Posted By Dartmoor Dave
Replies: 312
Views: 28,982
I've been casually following this thread as it has worked through the usual jsherman999 and Class A vs normhead and clackers routine (for the record, I'm with normhead and clackers). I'm left wondering if there has ever been a properly conducted double-blind test to establish whether or not people can consistently see a difference in quality between FF and APS-C.

A Google search just throws up endless discussions on various forums in which somebody posts a couple of random shots in the two formats, and then everyone argues about the methodology. The same thing has often been done here on PF, but it's not what I'm looking for. The gold standard is a well-conducted double-blind test under as close to lab conditions as possible, so that we would finally have some meaningful data about whether or not the human visual system can consistently perceive the tiny variations in technical quality that everyone is arguing about here.

I'm reminded about the endless debates in audiophile forums about whether cables and amplifiers and power supplies can really sound different. And of course there have now been enough double-blind tests to prove that they don't.

(Of course someone will counter with the argument that there are no measurable differences between audio cables, but there are measurable differences between FF and APS-C. But my point is that we need double-blind tests to establish whether or not human beings can reliably SEE those differences. If nothing else, it'd be fun to discuss how such a double-blind test would have to be conducted.)
Forum: Pentax Full Frame 02-25-2015, 07:00 AM  
Full Frame: The Real Pros (and Cons?)
Posted By Tony Belding
Replies: 312
Views: 28,982
I found this video to be the best explanation of the difference between full-frame versus crop sensors:
















You Tube




And our word of the day is "negligible".
Forum: Pentax Lens Articles 08-12-2010, 04:24 AM  
Sticky: How to use/meter Manual & M42 Lenses on all Pentax DSLRs (K-1, K-3, K-5, K-30, etc)
Posted By Adam
Replies: 358
Views: 416,641
Many Pentax DSLR owners want to use M42 screwmount (Takumar) lenses, or M or K manual lenses, on their cameras because of the low cost and relatively high image quality of these lenses.


If you're wondering whether or not these lenses can be used with Pentax DSLRs (or the K-01), then the answer is yes! Pentax as well as third-party manual and screwmount lenses can easily be mounted on any Pentax DSLR (such as the K-1 series, KP, K-3 series, K-70, K-S2, K-S1, K-50, K-500, K-30, K-5 series, K-r, K-x, K-7, K10D, K100D, K200D, *ist D, etc.) Just follow this guide!



Modern Pentax DSLRs use the Pentax "K-mount", which employs a bayonet and therefore differs significantly from the M42 screw mount. The older manual M and K (SMC Pentax-M, SMC Pentax) lenses actually use the bayonet, so they will not need an adapter - you can skip straight to the lower portion of this article (starting at "Important!") for information on how to meter with those lenses. Screwmount lenses usually have "Takumar" in their names, and in order to mount screwmount lenses on your k-mount body, you'll need a Pentax k to m42 adapter. Pictured above is the genuine Pentax adapter, which is ideally the one you want to get. Similar third-party adapters are also available. Caution: Many third-party adapters, such as this one, have a protruding flange which will prevent you from focusing all the way to infinity. If you want to buy a third-party adapter (they're generally cheaper), make sure that they don't have this flange. Here's an example of a good third-party adapter.

Once you have your adapter, the next step is to install it on your camera (it can easily be put on and removed on-the-fly). Check out the m42 to k adapter manual.


After you've installed the adapter, you'll want to mount the lens. This is done by screwing it into the camera until the lens feels firmly attached. The focusing window and lens ring should line up with the camera just like any other lens. Now that your lens is mounted, let's talk about how to take photos with it.

Important! The hard part is to get the camera to actually fire when a manual lens is mounted. In order to accomplish this, enter your camera's custom function menu, select the "Using Aperture Ring" setting (usually at the end of the menu, #21 on the K-7, #27 on the K-5, #27 on the K-3, #26 on the K-1), and set it to 2 (allowed). Once you do this, the shutter will at least fire, as it wouldn't have with this setting disabled (you would simply have seen an F-- indication on the top LCD/info screen). The setting description should read: 'Shutter will release when aperture ring is not set to the "A" position' when "allowed" is selected. Also note that the mount on the lens must be conductive for electrical current so that it shorts the electrical contacts on the camera body. All Pentax manufactured lenses have a conductive mount, but some third party lenses do not in which case the area of the mount touching the contacts must be sanded down.

K-30, K-50, K-500, K-70, K-S1, K-S2 and K-01 users: make sure you also set your green button "action in M/TAv Mode" to Tv SHIFT. This is found under the button customization menu (page 3 of the main menu) on the K-01 or as a custom function on the K-30, K-50 and K-500. On the K-S2 and K-70, look under the e-dial programming sub-menu under button customization in the record menu.

Finally, ensure that auto ISO is disabled.

At startup, if your camera asks you for the focal length, enter the actual focal length as labeled on the lens. This will ensure optimal Shake Reduction performance. For zooms, you can use the lower end of the zoom range (this ensures that there will be no over-compensation), or the focal length that you shoot at most often.

Now, let's discuss metering. Since manual lenses don't feed aperture data to the camera, the only way for the camera to check how much light is being passed through the lens is to measure the light while the lens is stopped down. Follow this procedure to properly meter with a screwmount, M, or K lens:

___0. Ensure that the "Using Aperture Ring" custom function is set to "2 (allowed)" (K-30/50/500/01 users must also ensure that the green button is configured to Tv Shift in M/TAv Mode) as described above
  1. Set your camera to M mode using the mode dial (your camera won't fire in other modes*)

  2. Compose and focus your image.

  3. Using the aperture ring (the ring at the very back of your lens; it will have numbers such as 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8 written on it), select your desired aperture setting. Note that the smaller the aperture number is, the more light passes through the lens, and the blurrier the out of focus areas of your photograph will be (and vice-versa). Note your lens will not stop down until step 5.

  4. [Screwmount lenses only] Switch the diaphragm clutch on your lens to "Manual" (you can leave it on Auto when composing and focusing if you don't want a dark viewfinder).

  5. Measure the light by either pressing the "Green Button" (older bodies may use the Av button), or pushing your power button to DOF preview mode (only available on high-end bodies). Your camera will automatically set the shutter speed for you.

All that's left now is for you to press the shutter release button to take your photo. Congratulations- you've now learned how to use M42 and M & K manual lenses with Pentax DSLRs!

*Screwmount lenses may also be used in Av mode since they are always stopped down to the aperture you will be shooting at (unlike M&K lenses, which are stopped down only when the shutter is released or when you meter as described above).

Note: if your aperture ring has an "A" on it, instead of doing stop-down metering as per this guide, you'll want to set the ring to "A" and use the camera's scrollweel to adjust the aperture via Av mode.

Click here if you found this article helpful!

Video version:















You Tube



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