It’s week two of shooting at only 27mm (which is 18mm on my mirrorless APS-C sensor camera). Like I predicted last week, this focal length works much better when you’re walking through a city centre where everything is closer together. You can make the most of the wide-angle view to capture the scene/vibe and it is easier to get closer to people and objects.
Grey-blue buildings on a grey day
Evening showers in Docklands
Warm buns in a shelf at Breadtop
Interesting fashion choices for a rain day
No one is seated outdoors on a rainy day
Umbrellas out on a rainy day in the city
Liberation can only be achieved…
Tram stops? I sure hope it does!
You are at the corner of Queen and Collins Streets, Melbourne
Empty benches on a rainy day in the city
Wet benches on a rainy day in the city
A bike named Larry (yes, yes, I know, that’s the brand name)
Three locks walk into a bike stand
Wet lime
Next week I move on to shooting at only 35mm, which I think I’ll find more challenging. I’m used to loosely composing my frame at 27mm and then zooming in or cropping a little in post to get the photo I actually want. From next week I’ll have to do all that before I take the photo. I’m looking forward to seeing how I go :)
Also, two things have changed since I started on this ‘one focal length at a time’ experiment:
I’m going to add the 4omm focal length into the mix (in addition to 35, 55, and 85mm). This is because Fujifilm have an excellent 27mm pancake lens I would love to have, and that translates to a 41mm focal length on my camera. If I find 40mm-ish works well for me, that might be the first prime lens I get.
I’m considering investing in only weather-sealed lenses and, in the future, only in weather-sealed camera bodies. I live in Melbourne, Australia where it rains 139 days a year. And because neither my current camera body nor my current lenses are weather sealed, I can’t go out and take photos when it’s raining.
In the short term I plan to buy a rain cover for my camera, so this isn’t something I need to address straight away. But if I am going to be buying a new lens in the next few months, I might as well try to buy one that’s weather sealed and, therefore, something I can keep long term.
(Assuming this is within my budget, of course, since sometimes it’s only the more professional versions of Fujifilm’s lenses that are weather sealed. That 27mm pancake lens I mentioned above is both decently priced and weather sealed, by the way, which is why it’s one of my front runners.)
I guess we’ll see which way I’m leaning by the end of this experiment.
But for now it’s time to say goodbye to 27mm and move on to 35mm. Let’s go!