Back then I was using a Tokina AF 400/5.6, now I use an AI 400/5.6 ED (not IF). This lens is slow to focus, and does not focus very close, but is optically good. I had both lenses for a while and compared them on a D50. The Tokina was very soft compared to the Nikkor, even on DX format. I sold the Tokina soon after
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I'm not sure how my lens compares with modern options such as the AFS 80-400VR or AFS 300/4 + TC-14E.
As for why I used a star-cutout, I was playing around with bokeh effects. I took picturess at night, long exposures of a city scene. I started the exposure with the city in focus, and then pulled the focus during the exposure so the point lights went out of focus and are surrounded with a star shaped glow. I also did the same using multiple exposures, shifting focus each time to get smaller to larger stars overlaid each other. This was on film, results probably don't compare to modern standards
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I did also consider a cutout with much larger number of very fine points to mimic the effects of an apodizing filter. I never tried, figured it wouldn't work very well since mechanical vignetting would make it ineffective towards the corners, and the multiple fine points would more likely lead to funky bokeh rather than the smooth effect desired.
I also thought about using a heart-shaped cutout, might be fun for wedding photography
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