Newtown Street Art with the Voigtländer Nokton 17.5mm/1:0.95 and Panasonic GX9
These pictures of street art and graffiti were taken around Newtown side streets.
These pictures of street art and graffiti were taken around Newtown side streets.
These pictures were taken at historic Camperdown Cemetery near Newtown.
These pictures were taken at the Newtown Record Fair at the Bank Hotel.
These pictures were taken around the Chinatown and Haymarket area.
These pictures were taken at the heritage-listed Sydney Trades Hall, and showcases the lens ability to capture murals and indoor details, often at relatively low light.
These pictures were taken at the heritage Michell Library (also known as State Library of New South Wales), the oldest library in Australia and showcases the lens’ low light capture abilities as well as the absence of perspective distortions when capturing large architectural spaces.
These pictures were taken on a walk from Cowpers Bay Wharf at Woolloomoolloo to Sydney’s Central Business District. It showcases the lens as a general purpose standard lens that you may take on a photowalk, or when you are a tourist discovering a city for the first time.
These pictures were taken around The Rocks Area and showcases the lens as a general purpose standard lens that you may take on a photowalk, or when you are a tourist discovering a city for the first time.
The Nokton 17.5mm lens is part of a series of Voigtländer lenses for the Micro Four-Thirds system, and all lenses in the series has an amazingly large aperture (f0.95).
This is probably the most quirky currently-in-production lens for the M-mount, looking more like a mini Dalek from Dr. Who than a boring camera lens.
These pictures were taken at Broadway in two locations: the Blackfriars campus of the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) and the TAFE NSW Ultimo Campus.
These pictures were taken around Surry Hills up Oxford and Riley streets and back down on Commonwealth Street.
These pictures were taken at a walk around the Circular Quay and Rocks areas of Sydney.
These pictures were taken at St. Mary’s Cathedral and gives an overview of how the lens performs in low light.
This is the second of a series of articles showcasing pictures taken on the Voigtländer Heliar 50mm/1:3.5. These pictures were taken at St. James and gives an overview of how the lens performs in low light.
These pictures were taken around Sydney and showcases the amazing contrast and colour rendition of the lens.
Voigtländer say that this is their “best performance standard lens ever” and that’s a pretty bold claim. It is a high performance manual focus standard lens optimised for the imaging sensors of Sony mirrorless cameras.
The Voigtländer 40 mm/1:1.2 Nokton is a fast, manual lens, intended as an all-rounder walkabout prime lens that can shoot a variety of subjects comfortably. It straddles the gap between two common focal lengths for standard/normal lenses: 35mm and 50mm.
These pictures were taken at the Wollombi Valley Scupture Festival called “Sculpture in the Vineyards”.