Measuring
Footwear
Tri-X 400 Edit
Ubi
Chapel
Locksbrook
Office
Locksbrook Tree
IHS Monogram
Cosinon Chair
On a Bedroom Chair
Out of Steam
Anchor and Cross, Locksbrook
Peace
Cherry Tree Villa
Paper Chain
The Unused Notice Board
Chinon Lens on Fuji Camera
Falling Asleep
19 Holes
A Crowded Room
A Fallen Memorial
An Angel of Locksbrook
Fujinon 55mm f/2.2
Wall
Tim Rudman's Icelandic Exhibition B&W
The Swerve
Five Go Neolithic
Behold Her, Single In The Field
The Two Ladies of Stourhead
Cake, Demolished
Europeans
Blokes
East Street
King's Troop New Edit
Having a Smoke (Tri-X Edit)
Having a Smoke
Royal Horse Artillery
Lady Visitors
Masumi de Coty Avec Billet
Girl in a Hat
King George V Playing Fields
Wet August Day
The One With The Dog
All Stars
See also...
Pentacon, Tessar, Carl Zeiss Jena, Helios and Jupiter Photos
Pentacon, Tessar, Carl Zeiss Jena, Helios and Jupiter Photos
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
224 visits
Sink Waste (Helios-44)


Photographed using one of the relatively early Helios-44 lenses, a preset with unusual positioning of the aperture ring at the front and a scalloped focussing ring close to the camera end. The filter ring is 49mm and there are 13 aperture blades. When I bought it on eBay it was screwed into a Zenit-E. The logo engraved at the front reveals it was manufactured by the KMZ company. It is quite good, if a bit counter intuitive in use.
It was a more up-to-date auto version of this lens that was on my first SLR, a Zenit-EM. I don't think I realised at that time just what a special optic I had.
I have been reading a blog about the Helios-44 used in combination with a Fuji-X camera - www.sharkandpalm.com/photography-tips/walking-through-washington-heights-on-a-rainy-afternoon
The writer enthuses about ‘the gorgeous lo-fi bokeh the Helios 44-4 offers wide open’ and remarks ‘Something I understand more every time I shoot with this lens is the limits of it's sharpness. Even when focus is spot-on, a subject on the edge of the frame hazes and blurs out of focus.’ He is surprised ‘that this cheap vintage glass can perform so well for architectural and landscape shots!’
In a blog reviewing the Helios-44 at www.sharkandpalm.com/camera-reviews/helios-44-4-lens-review-swirly-bokeh-for-portraits he opines that ‘for $30’ it is ‘one of the best portrait lenses for a mirrorless body you can find.’
Regarding the ‘Helios 44-4's Swirly Bokeh’ he finds that, ‘Funnily enough, this optical quality was also considered an engineering defect: newer versions of the Helios lens phased it out. The Helios 44-4, being one of the earliest models, exhibits some of the most dramatic swirly bokeh.’
Camera: Fujifilm X-E1.
It was a more up-to-date auto version of this lens that was on my first SLR, a Zenit-EM. I don't think I realised at that time just what a special optic I had.
I have been reading a blog about the Helios-44 used in combination with a Fuji-X camera - www.sharkandpalm.com/photography-tips/walking-through-washington-heights-on-a-rainy-afternoon
The writer enthuses about ‘the gorgeous lo-fi bokeh the Helios 44-4 offers wide open’ and remarks ‘Something I understand more every time I shoot with this lens is the limits of it's sharpness. Even when focus is spot-on, a subject on the edge of the frame hazes and blurs out of focus.’ He is surprised ‘that this cheap vintage glass can perform so well for architectural and landscape shots!’
In a blog reviewing the Helios-44 at www.sharkandpalm.com/camera-reviews/helios-44-4-lens-review-swirly-bokeh-for-portraits he opines that ‘for $30’ it is ‘one of the best portrait lenses for a mirrorless body you can find.’
Regarding the ‘Helios 44-4's Swirly Bokeh’ he finds that, ‘Funnily enough, this optical quality was also considered an engineering defect: newer versions of the Helios lens phased it out. The Helios 44-4, being one of the earliest models, exhibits some of the most dramatic swirly bokeh.’
Camera: Fujifilm X-E1.
, Jean-luc Drouin, Luc Reiniche, Arlequin Photographie have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.