I agree, if you're a studio shooter at 1:1, and beyond, the CV 125 isn't much of a choice. I almost never use my own in-studio 1:1; I use a reversed 50mm and wider primes for closer-magnification. (Will be using that Laowa after it ships
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Hope you enjoy the Laowa! I'm certainly enjoying mine
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Great to know people have interest in such a lens, maybe Laowa will make up his mind and make us a 5-10x as well! Goodbye Mitutoyo, I won't miss your consumer-level quality control
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Ebay is bad for sellers, but can be good for buyers. You're talking selling.
I can rant on and eat my keyboard about this!
You know what? I just received another warning for providing a buyer with my phone number! Ebay's messaging system sucks buffalo toes. I once missed an arranged pickup due to the notification, offered the item for free to avoid a negative rating. Thankfully it was essentially worthless. The warning message was about selling outside of ebay, sent AFTER the buyer has PAID, AND RECEIVED the item, and left a positive feedback!!!!! Grrrrrrrr... Last time it was because a buyer wanted to arrange a local inspection. I'm calling them up tomorrow (eh, today, it's 3:30 am), I can't take this anymore, all my listings have been disabled and account is banned for a week.
Regarding buying, the $400 difference between $1200 and $1600 is far less than a trip to Japan, imo (unless you live there, or plan on going there anyway).
I plan on visiting Japan anyway
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Not going to specifically go there just for a lens and indulging in Japanese food all day haha.
Comparing studio accessory components to the subject of this thread (the CV 125) seems an invalid comparison.
We're talking lenses here, not components.
If you're a 100% studio shooter, then I agree, there are many options I too would select besides the CV 125.
However, if you decide to go outdoors, then scanners, breadboards, and the like, are complete anachronisms in this type of setting.
Oh, what I meant was I'm strictly a studio worker, actually it's called "digitising specimens". I can justify splurging lots of money on my setup since it's for the field I work in. The CV 125mm however would be a luxury item, rather than a cash maker (well, I'm still learning and gaining skills, not making too much cash yet).
Mmmm, totally disagree with the idea the 85mm tilt-shift "easily wins" over the CV 125 in versatility. (IMO, it is exactly the opposite.)
The tilt-shift is, by far, the more limited item ... reduced to only a few useful parameters, in which it does shine ... but is useless for almost anything else (no 1:1, no focus throw, no sharpness/bokeh by comparison, inferior color rendering, etc.). IMO it takes a way distant back seat to the Voigtländer as a naturalist's optic.
I've used tubes on my 85mm, getting to 1:1, tilt-shift works just fine, and the images are still tact-sharp. The colours aren't the best but realistic enough. Capture One does a great job anyway, the colours produced are snappy to my eye, maybe not to others, but eh, colours is really the realms of subjectivity here. I personally cannot understand why people like those Sigma colours, and even claim that "because it's desaturated, it gives more room for post-processing", this just sounds ridiculous.
Nikon D810 Jpeg Fine VS LR Raw and C1 Raw Conversions by
Macro Cosmos (DH)I'm not sure which lens is sharper, I don't have doubts that the CV would win, however I won't be surprised if the 85mm wins either. Bokeh on the 85mm is just fine in my opinion, or perhaps I've never used a CV to truly appreciate its bokeh rendering. The several major problems I have with the 85mm is its ridiculously short (and frankly stupid) focus throw, gruesome LoCA, and the knobs being tiny.
I use mine primarily for landscapes and close-ups. I'm pretty horrible when it comes to landscapes but I do enjoy it however.
Sydney City Under Blue Hour by
Macro Cosmos (DH)The 24mm is pretty solid as well, but it does have some problems too. Namely the resolution is just enough for the D810, I'm guessing a D850 will render it unusable, perhaps not, I don't know. The knobs are also tiny. Here's a close-up. I like the bubbly specular highlight balls, some people don't like it. Bokeh though, this is a wide angle lens, so getting any sort of bokeh requires sticking the lens up to the object extremely closely. This is a stack of 8 exposures I believe, at f8 or f5.6.
Some Spiky Fruit by
Macro Cosmos (DH)If studio is your thing, using artificial lighting, then I agree the CV 125 is not the right choice (I have one, and even I never use it in my own studio for macro).
However, for authentic nature photography in nature's best light, the CV 125 is close to peerless.
We both enjoy studio macro; where we differ is I am able to get 2x, 3x, 4x, and 5x macro stacks ... of many arthropods ... without harming anything.
(I do understand the challenge of dealing with the potential for movement, but that is also part of the reward ... when you're able to succeed with the stack of a live organism ... and can return it, unharmed, where you found it.)
I've actually obtained some 10x stacks of live critters before. It was far from perfect, but good enough I'd say. I'm surrounded by spiders, and find their corpses everywhere actually, I don't have a problem keeping the corpse. As for killing a living critter, I try not to, but sometimes accidents happen
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Ehh, forgetting I left it in the freezer is an example, didn't like the feel. But yeah, if I want to work in the field of specimen digitising, it would be strictly dead critters being handled. I like stacking minerals more than I like stacking critters actually. Minerals are very challenging also. Here's a recent one with the laowa
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Gold Nugget by
Macro Cosmos (DH)