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Nikon 135mm f 2 DC 说明书

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2024年3月15日发(作者:盘新立)

Nikon 135mm f/2 DCSeite 1 von 12

Nikon 135mm f/2 DC

The King of Bokeh (1990-)

© 2009 . All rights reserved.

Intro Specs Performance Recommendations

Nikon AF DC-NIKKOR 135mm f/2 D (72mm filters, 28.9oz/818g, about $1,300).

enlarge. I'd get it new or used at at Adorama or B&H Photo Video, new at Amazon,

or used at eBay. The 135 DC is a limited-production lens, and therefore hard to find

in stock; you have to order it and wait. It helps me keep adding this site when you

get yours from these links, thanks! Ken.

December 2009 More Nikon Reviews

Introduction

top

Intro Specs Performance Recommendations

The Nikon AF 135mm f/2 DC is Nikon's, and arguably the world's,

greatest portrait lens. It has a very similar smaller brother, the

105mm f/2 DC.

The 135mm DC is also Nikon's sharpest 135mm lens, and an

extraordinarily great lens for nature and landscape photography. It

is worlds sharper and freer from spherical aberration than any of

the the old manual focus 135mm f/2 lenses.

The hood is the best built-in hood I've ever used. It is metal, and it

locks into position so it doesn't shrivel down like most other built-in

hoods.

You have to move a ring to get to manual focus mode, and once

you do, manual focus is fantastic.

Search Amazon:

/nikon/04.01.2010

Nikon 135mm f/2 DCSeite 2 von 12

Defocus Control

DC stands for Defocus Control. A lot got lost in the translation on

the way from Japan. The key word is control, not defocus. This is

not a soft-focus lens; it is a lens that has been specifically

designed and patented both for superior bokeh (the softness of

out-of-focus areas), and the ability to control this bokeh for

I personally buy

optimum results under all conditions.

from Adorama,

Amazon, Ritz, B&H,

Calumet

and J&R. I

can't vouch for

ads

below.

Defocus Image Control. bigger.

How do you set this 135mm lens for optimum bokeh? Easy: set

this ring to the same aperture at which you're shooting. Press the

unlock button on the left in order to move it, otherwise it stays

locked. Set it to the R side to make backgrounds go soft and

disappear, or the F side if you want to optimize it for junk in the

foreground.

Hint: You should almost never have out-of-focus objects in front of

your subject or in the foreground. It looks unnatural and weird. Our

eyes naturally focus on the closest thing to us, so it's

uncomfortable when a photo has a soft foreground or other

distractions which our eyes can't bring into focus.

The effects of this defocus control are very subtle. You won't see it

through your viewfinder. When used properly, the 135 DC turns

backgrounds into the softest, smoothest washes of color you've

ever seen. Turn the ring in the wrong direction, and out-of-focus

backgrounds get harsher. These are subtle effects. Computer people may not see

these subtleties at all, but artists will.

Leave the Defocus Image Control ring at zero, and the 135 DC simply acts as the

sharpest 135mm lens you've ever used.

The defocus control only controls defocus, or the parts of the image that are not in

focus.

If you set the control beyond the aperture you're using, like set to f/5.6 when

shooiting at f/2, you can get a softer focus effect.

The in-focus part of the image is always ultra sharp. This is not a soft-focus lens. It's

only the unfocused parts of the image which are made softer. No one in the USA

understands this lost-in-translation subtlety, and mistakenly thinks this is a soft focus

lens. That's why this lens isn't popular in the USA.

The 135 DC has a control for all of this. This is why Nikon has the patent on it. You

can adjust the lens from normal to super bokeh to soft focus if you push it too far.

You'll notice that dedicated soft-focus lenses have no separate defocus control; they

are fixed one way and the only control you have is your shooting aperture.

/nikon/04.01.2010

2024年3月15日发(作者:盘新立)

Nikon 135mm f/2 DCSeite 1 von 12

Nikon 135mm f/2 DC

The King of Bokeh (1990-)

© 2009 . All rights reserved.

Intro Specs Performance Recommendations

Nikon AF DC-NIKKOR 135mm f/2 D (72mm filters, 28.9oz/818g, about $1,300).

enlarge. I'd get it new or used at at Adorama or B&H Photo Video, new at Amazon,

or used at eBay. The 135 DC is a limited-production lens, and therefore hard to find

in stock; you have to order it and wait. It helps me keep adding this site when you

get yours from these links, thanks! Ken.

December 2009 More Nikon Reviews

Introduction

top

Intro Specs Performance Recommendations

The Nikon AF 135mm f/2 DC is Nikon's, and arguably the world's,

greatest portrait lens. It has a very similar smaller brother, the

105mm f/2 DC.

The 135mm DC is also Nikon's sharpest 135mm lens, and an

extraordinarily great lens for nature and landscape photography. It

is worlds sharper and freer from spherical aberration than any of

the the old manual focus 135mm f/2 lenses.

The hood is the best built-in hood I've ever used. It is metal, and it

locks into position so it doesn't shrivel down like most other built-in

hoods.

You have to move a ring to get to manual focus mode, and once

you do, manual focus is fantastic.

Search Amazon:

/nikon/04.01.2010

Nikon 135mm f/2 DCSeite 2 von 12

Defocus Control

DC stands for Defocus Control. A lot got lost in the translation on

the way from Japan. The key word is control, not defocus. This is

not a soft-focus lens; it is a lens that has been specifically

designed and patented both for superior bokeh (the softness of

out-of-focus areas), and the ability to control this bokeh for

I personally buy

optimum results under all conditions.

from Adorama,

Amazon, Ritz, B&H,

Calumet

and J&R. I

can't vouch for

ads

below.

Defocus Image Control. bigger.

How do you set this 135mm lens for optimum bokeh? Easy: set

this ring to the same aperture at which you're shooting. Press the

unlock button on the left in order to move it, otherwise it stays

locked. Set it to the R side to make backgrounds go soft and

disappear, or the F side if you want to optimize it for junk in the

foreground.

Hint: You should almost never have out-of-focus objects in front of

your subject or in the foreground. It looks unnatural and weird. Our

eyes naturally focus on the closest thing to us, so it's

uncomfortable when a photo has a soft foreground or other

distractions which our eyes can't bring into focus.

The effects of this defocus control are very subtle. You won't see it

through your viewfinder. When used properly, the 135 DC turns

backgrounds into the softest, smoothest washes of color you've

ever seen. Turn the ring in the wrong direction, and out-of-focus

backgrounds get harsher. These are subtle effects. Computer people may not see

these subtleties at all, but artists will.

Leave the Defocus Image Control ring at zero, and the 135 DC simply acts as the

sharpest 135mm lens you've ever used.

The defocus control only controls defocus, or the parts of the image that are not in

focus.

If you set the control beyond the aperture you're using, like set to f/5.6 when

shooiting at f/2, you can get a softer focus effect.

The in-focus part of the image is always ultra sharp. This is not a soft-focus lens. It's

only the unfocused parts of the image which are made softer. No one in the USA

understands this lost-in-translation subtlety, and mistakenly thinks this is a soft focus

lens. That's why this lens isn't popular in the USA.

The 135 DC has a control for all of this. This is why Nikon has the patent on it. You

can adjust the lens from normal to super bokeh to soft focus if you push it too far.

You'll notice that dedicated soft-focus lenses have no separate defocus control; they

are fixed one way and the only control you have is your shooting aperture.

/nikon/04.01.2010

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