I have a Nikon D7000 and have tried freelensing with my Rokinon 85mm f/1.4, Nikon 35mm f/1.8 DX, and a zoom Nikon 35-70mm f/2.8 without much success. The problem is that everything is out of focus no matter what I set the lens' focus to.
Any advice?
I have a Nikon D7000 and have tried freelensing with my Rokinon 85mm f/1.4, Nikon 35mm f/1.8 DX, and a zoom Nikon 35-70mm f/2.8 without much success. The problem is that everything is out of focus no matter what I set the lens' focus to.
Any advice?
If you're holding the lens away from the body then you're getting the same effect as using extension tubes, namely that the min and max focussing distances get much closer, which is probably why everything is out of focus.
The only way to achieve focussing at non-macro distances when holding the lens away from the mount you would need a lens designed to sit further from the film plane such as a medium format lens. As you don't need to worry about adaptors when freelensing you could pick up any cheap obsolete MF lens from http://keh.com
I researched and believe this is the best answer:
To do freelensing best, use:
From what I've read on Flickr and dpreview, this is the best lens for freelensing: 50mm f/1.4 (for Nikon the non G version 50mm f/1.4 AF-D is best).
I listed this as it makes it easier to prefocus the lens prior to detaching it and freelensing it. Holding the camera body and lens while also trying to focus the lens is difficult to do and is a bit risky, as you may drop your lens or camera. The hard-infinity stop helps reduce this by setting the focus ring before detaching the lens.
– bperdue Mar 10 '11 at 04:02I'm using a Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 to do freelensing. I've had some success with it. I was able to get some nice macro effects going on.