I worked as a photographer in the military and fell in love with an 85mm Nikon lens. So much so that I ended up getting the 85mm f1.8 for my Canon camera. Excellent portrait lens.
Thumbs up once again.... 85 to 135 is generally the sweet spot, outside this range it needs careful assessment; wider for environmental and dramatic effects, tighter for details. Personally I love tight portraits where the head fills the entire frame, and quite often exceeds the frame, so it isn’t unlikely that I am using focals longer than 135, even up to 300.
Awesome Video, I few months ago I did a photoshoot of a female personal trainer at a gym with a 50mm ( the only lens I had ), I quickly discovered that her body looked chunky, so my only choice was to step back and crop on postproduction, I think I can see the same effect on the last series of images of this video, his right leg on the ladder looks very short and thicker with 50mm and long, slender with the 85mm.
Great video! The reason my 85 is the most beloved of all is because _everything_, the entire world, looks beautiful through it. Not just people. Also pets, landscapes, wild animals, buildings, everything. Beautiful. I would just strap the 85 on my eyes permanently except that it's way too much inside a house and I would just trip over everything trying to walk around.
My sigma 85mm f1.4 dg dn just arrived. My first 85mm and actually my second lens (besides vintage lenses I’ve inherited). Already did a shoot with it on Friday and I can’t wait to shoot again 🤩 I love your work and it’s nice to see you say 85 is such an important focal length. 🥳
Hey just wanted to ask as a happy user of the same lens. Do you think it's sometimes too sharp especially for portraits? At f4 in closeups you pretty much see all the possible details and flaws of skin and everything else, often it's too much
@@piotrlisowski2012 Which body do you use it on? Are you talking about the jpegs? Do you have automatic sharpening on export turned on in your raw processor? I have never felt a result from it was too sharp but maybe I take a lot less closeups/ headshots than you do. I use the a7iv so when I do full bodies or hips up photos the face is too small to have any uncomfortable level of detail. My camera also has a skin smoothing feature which I actually like to use. Granted I also quite often shoot wide open with it, besides the fashion stuff I did recently where there were a pair of models and they both needed to be sharp. I think that you can either just mask the face skin and reduce 'texture' by 10 or 20 points in lightroom (if you use lightroom, this is now like 4 clicks and you can batch apply it) with the Sigma, or you might prefer to use a vintage lens of some kind. They can be very affordable and they weren't as clinically sharp.
For the kind of portraits I shoot, I prefer an 85mm f/1.4. The work you do is amazing. May I ask what these portraits are used for? I've seen far too many photography instructors on TH-cam that are learning, themselves, as they're trying to teach others. It's great to see someone who so obviously knows what he's talking about. Your portraits are beautiful! Thanks, John.
Thank you so much Miley. I did this shoot to make content for TH-cam and Instagram. I do, however, learn through the process of making these videos. Usually its by demonstrating something that I have known for a while, but when I go to create the content, I discover a nuance that I didn't fully understand before.
Thanks for this great tutorial, I love the outcome! One question: how many degrees are the two grids on the two 7 inch reflectors that are lighting the background en the back of the model’s ear?
In my studio I always have 50 1.4, 85 1.8 and 135 1.8 at hand. And in the end the most used lens is 85 and for close 135. The 50 is almost not used. Thx!
Great comparison! However, the head shot with a 35 AND from the same DISTANCE looks exactly like the head shot with the 135 shot from the same difference. Only downside: if you shoot the head with a 35 from far away you do lose "a bit" of resolution but gain a bit of DOF with the shorter lens. :-) But you knew all that...
@@JohnGress So, from a practical standpoint: are there any sitters coming into your studio where you think "I need to enlong their noses and go for a 50mm" or - likewise - "compress their noses" with a 200mm? One learing could be that you shoot short-necked people with a 180mm and extremely long-necked people with a 35mm to even out the feature?
I think the problem here is how you define portrait. Of course, when you limit that to a headshot, 35mm is sort-of terrible, but not always - just try to frame in horizontal and maybe not that narrow. On the other hand, 35mm is just perfect for something more in a frame. When you shoot subject in a location it adds a lot of context and when framed wisely, does not make much harm to a subject's features.
@@JohnGressdistortion has nothing to do with optics. The only cause of distortion is camera to subject distance, because it alters the perspective. Try shooting several photos from the exact same location with different focal length. You will see that all the photos have the same perspective/distortion
Somewhere between 100 mm and 180 mm, or thereabouts, is best for portrait photography for only one or two persons, if and when you have enough space. Smallish groups often require a lens no longer than 50 mm.
John, I do have a question. Not having seen the model in person; what are the factors which lead you to prefer the 85 over the 100? I see his jaw looks more 'square' and his cheeks fuller at 85. At 100 his lips look marginally thinner and his ears look a little further back on his skull ... but that may be a slight difference in the lighting (judging by the tie). As ever: thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Thank you for commenting. I guess I didn't word things very well. What I was trying to say was that there isn't a big difference between 85 and 135. Because I have an 85mm prime lens and longer focal lengths can require more depth of field, I will just stick with an 85 for its versatility.
Hey, John. If you do this kind of video again can you mention (or put a link in the description) the offset arm used to mount the main light? The arm is very useful and space-saving, but other photographers may not know what it is. Mine is the Kupo Baby 5/8in Offset Arm (item KG006512). Less than $35 on Amazon. They are very secure and allow me to shoot right under an on-axis modifier without needing to move slightly to the left/right of the c-stand bar. Aces for product photography as well.
@@JohnGress Actually watching another video (3 key positions for your main light) where you placed text underneath identifying the offset arm and placed a link in the description. :)
Hi John! I currently use a Canon rf 24/105 f2.8 L. It is an amazing lens for its versatility, Do you think I could get good results with this lens and setting it for the 85mm focal length?
Any lens at 85 mm will give you the same perspective. The only difference between Newland and primes is the ability to have more shallow depth of field.
@@JohnGressthank you for your response! I think I am going to save up to invest in an 85mm. Once this lens is paid off, I’ll go for that one. I have been up in the air over the canon 15-35 2.8 L as my next lens. But it seems I should make the 85 be next. I do currently have a 50 1.8 (not an L glass) that sometimes gives me great results, but not for everything. I shoot with a canon R6 Mark II. My main photography is portraits, studio and location, lifestyle and event shooting entertainers. The 24/105 is amazing for low light! I am so glad I found your channel!! I am also in the middle of building my lighting/studio gear A little at a time and watching your Videos and that Set.A.Light app is going to help me so much!! Thank you so much!!
i like 135 mm looks more masculine, neck looks longer, shoulders look wider, camera looks lower, head looks smaller and why it looks taller,you can do with 35 what you do and with 85 if you have distance and you crop
I would expect it to be the same for equivalent focal lengths. So your 50 would = my 85. I think the distortion is due to the optics but also the angle of view, which is a result of your distance to the subject.
Great video mate. Focal length is something I always ask myself when shooting photos and videos. In contrast to photographers, I noticed film makers like to shoot their actors with a wide angle. This is to make the shot more "personal" and "dramatic'. What is your comment on this?
I worked as a photographer in the military and fell in love with an 85mm Nikon lens. So much so that I ended up getting the 85mm f1.8 for my Canon camera. Excellent portrait lens.
Thumbs up once again.... 85 to 135 is generally the sweet spot, outside this range it needs careful assessment; wider for environmental and dramatic effects, tighter for details. Personally I love tight portraits where the head fills the entire frame, and quite often exceeds the frame, so it isn’t unlikely that I am using focals longer than 135, even up to 300.
Thanks Nilo. It has been a minute since I framed like that, but I definitely should again!
My favorite lens for portraits is a Tamron 90mm f2.8 Thanks for the study!
Awesome Video, I few months ago I did a photoshoot of a female personal trainer at a gym with a 50mm ( the only lens I had ), I quickly discovered that her body looked chunky, so my only choice was to step back and crop on postproduction, I think I can see the same effect on the last series of images of this video, his right leg on the ladder looks very short and thicker with 50mm and long, slender with the 85mm.
Excellent observation. Thank you for sharing Jose!
@@JohnGress
Do need a grid for the vignetting light?
No questions at all! Glad I found you now, if not for 12 years back. Phenomenal content!
Thank you so much Antony! I really appreciate it!
Great video!
The reason my 85 is the most beloved of all is because _everything_, the entire world, looks beautiful through it. Not just people. Also pets, landscapes, wild animals, buildings, everything. Beautiful.
I would just strap the 85 on my eyes permanently except that it's way too much inside a house and I would just trip over everything trying to walk around.
Better keep the 8mm on for indoors ;)
haha lmao
My sigma 85mm f1.4 dg dn just arrived. My first 85mm and actually my second lens (besides vintage lenses I’ve inherited). Already did a shoot with it on Friday and I can’t wait to shoot again 🤩
I love your work and it’s nice to see you say 85 is such an important focal length. 🥳
Congratulations and thank you so much! I had a Sigma Art 85 before I had the Canon RF 85mm 1.2.
Hey just wanted to ask as a happy user of the same lens. Do you think it's sometimes too sharp especially for portraits? At f4 in closeups you pretty much see all the possible details and flaws of skin and everything else, often it's too much
@@piotrlisowski2012 Which body do you use it on?
Are you talking about the jpegs? Do you have automatic sharpening on export turned on in your raw processor?
I have never felt a result from it was too sharp but maybe I take a lot less closeups/ headshots than you do. I use the a7iv so when I do full bodies or hips up photos the face is too small to have any uncomfortable level of detail.
My camera also has a skin smoothing feature which I actually like to use.
Granted I also quite often shoot wide open with it, besides the fashion stuff I did recently where there were a pair of models and they both needed to be sharp.
I think that you can either just mask the face skin and reduce 'texture' by 10 or 20 points in lightroom (if you use lightroom, this is now like 4 clicks and you can batch apply it) with the Sigma,
or you might prefer to use a vintage lens of some kind. They can be very affordable and they weren't as clinically sharp.
For the kind of portraits I shoot, I prefer an 85mm f/1.4. The work you do is amazing. May I ask what these portraits are used for? I've seen far too many photography instructors on TH-cam that are learning, themselves, as they're trying to teach others. It's great to see someone who so obviously knows what he's talking about. Your portraits are beautiful! Thanks, John.
Thank you so much Miley. I did this shoot to make content for TH-cam and Instagram. I do, however, learn through the process of making these videos. Usually its by demonstrating something that I have known for a while, but when I go to create the content, I discover a nuance that I didn't fully understand before.
Thanks for this great tutorial, I love the outcome!
One question: how many degrees are the two grids on the two 7 inch reflectors that are lighting the background en the back of the model’s ear?
Thanks! There isn't a grid on the background light and the other one is probably 20-degrees.
In my studio I always have 50 1.4, 85 1.8 and 135 1.8 at hand. And in the end the most used lens is 85 and for close 135. The 50 is almost not used. Thx!
That sounds about like how I shoot too. Except for I end up at 70mm sometimes for full body because of the framing.
Great comparison! However, the head shot with a 35 AND from the same DISTANCE looks exactly like the head shot with the 135 shot from the same difference. Only downside: if you shoot the head with a 35 from far away you do lose "a bit" of resolution but gain a bit of DOF with the shorter lens. :-) But you knew all that...
Yeah a BIT! LOL But seriously, thanks for pointing that out.
@@JohnGress So, from a practical standpoint: are there any sitters coming into your studio where you think "I need to enlong their noses and go for a 50mm" or - likewise - "compress their noses" with a 200mm? One learing could be that you shoot short-necked people with a 180mm and extremely long-necked people with a 35mm to even out the feature?
There was someone I shot a few months ago where I think I felt like I needed more compression so I went with 135
I think the problem here is how you define portrait. Of course, when you limit that to a headshot, 35mm is sort-of terrible, but not always - just try to frame in horizontal and maybe not that narrow. On the other hand, 35mm is just perfect for something more in a frame. When you shoot subject in a location it adds a lot of context and when framed wisely, does not make much harm to a subject's features.
I agree you would want to use wider lenses for environmental portraits. The distortion is due to the optics but also the angle of view.
@@JohnGressdistortion has nothing to do with optics. The only cause of distortion is camera to subject distance, because it alters the perspective. Try shooting several photos from the exact same location with different focal length. You will see that all the photos have the same perspective/distortion
Somewhere between 100 mm and 180 mm, or thereabouts, is best for portrait photography for only one or two persons, if and when you have enough space. Smallish groups often require a lens no longer than 50 mm.
John u brilliant , u work is outstanding Vasili.
Creatifeco
Thank you so much! You are too kind.
Do need a grid for the vignetting light?
It will likely vignette on its own.
Definitely 85, 100 and 135 don’t look the same. He looks more handsome at 135, with his face flatter.
The framing and lighting for this talking head is insane… 😂 a new subscriber lol
Ha! Thank you so much!
thx for this. Could be nice to see same video with other brands.
Thank you. This isn't really a brand specific exercise. The principals will generally still be the same as what matters is the angle of view.
John, I do have a question. Not having seen the model in person; what are the factors which lead you to prefer the 85 over the 100?
I see his jaw looks more 'square' and his cheeks fuller at 85. At 100 his lips look marginally thinner and his ears look a little further back on his skull ... but that may be a slight difference in the lighting (judging by the tie).
As ever: thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Thank you for commenting. I guess I didn't word things very well. What I was trying to say was that there isn't a big difference between 85 and 135. Because I have an 85mm prime lens and longer focal lengths can require more depth of field, I will just stick with an 85 for its versatility.
Hey, John. If you do this kind of video again can you mention (or put a link in the description) the offset arm used to mount the main light? The arm is very useful and space-saving, but other photographers may not know what it is. Mine is the Kupo Baby 5/8in Offset Arm (item KG006512). Less than $35 on Amazon. They are very secure and allow me to shoot right under an on-axis modifier without needing to move slightly to the left/right of the c-stand bar. Aces for product photography as well.
That's what I am using amzn.to/2DlleEz I feel like I sell one of these every week!
@@JohnGress Actually watching another video (3 key positions for your main light) where you placed text underneath identifying the offset arm and placed a link in the description. :)
If I have the room I always go with 105mm or 135mm
Very helpful 🙏🏾
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
thanks
Thank you
Hi John! I currently use a Canon rf 24/105 f2.8 L. It is an amazing lens for its versatility, Do you think I could get good results with this lens and setting it for the 85mm focal length?
Any lens at 85 mm will give you the same perspective. The only difference between Newland and primes is the ability to have more shallow depth of field.
@@JohnGressthank you for your response! I think I am going to save up to invest in an 85mm. Once this lens is paid off, I’ll go for that one. I have been up in the air over the canon 15-35 2.8 L as my next lens. But it seems I should make the 85 be next. I do currently have a 50 1.8 (not an L glass) that sometimes gives me great results, but not for everything. I shoot with a canon R6 Mark II. My main photography is portraits, studio and location, lifestyle and event shooting entertainers. The 24/105 is amazing for low light!
I am so glad I found your channel!! I am also in the middle of building my lighting/studio gear A little at a time and watching your Videos and that Set.A.Light app is going to help me so much!!
Thank you so much!!
That’s great to hear. Welcome and ttys! I hope the videos help.
i like 135 mm looks more masculine, neck looks longer, shoulders look wider, camera looks lower, head looks smaller and why it looks taller,you can do with 35 what you do and with 85 if you have distance and you crop
Great video
Thank you so much Tony!
John, what camera stand are you using?
Its my new Studio Titan Camera Stand STA-01-360 MK2
studiotitanamerica.com/products/sta-01-360-mk2 =)
@@JohnGress $2000, Well done ;)
Great sir
Thank you so much!
Do you put filters on your lenses?
Almost never
is it equal with crop frame lens
I would expect it to be the same for equivalent focal lengths. So your 50 would = my 85. I think the distortion is due to the optics but also the angle of view, which is a result of your distance to the subject.
Great video mate. Focal length is something I always ask myself when shooting photos and videos. In contrast to photographers, I noticed film makers like to shoot their actors with a wide angle. This is to make the shot more "personal" and "dramatic'. What is your comment on this?
Thanks Jason. I could see that for artistic effect. Shooting horizontal also tells more of the story because we see their surroundings.
A 35mm medium shot places you there with the actor. A 50mm medium shots makes you "look at the actor". Wider focal lengths gives a greater immersion.
With which lens did you shoot the video?
A 28-70mm f2 at 70mm on a Canon C70
@@JohnGress thank you
I’ve had em all but I think the Canon 50 1.2 takes the cake
I think you should finish the video =)
Does that mean, that you wouldn't use 50mm for a full body portrait?
I would avoid using a 50mm for full body, if I could avoid it. Unless of course I needed the field of view to show an environment.
🙋 P r o m o s m!
👍🏾🙏🏾
Thanks Eugene!