XPan GFX -- share your examples

Lucky to get this one…..he was only there for a minute
Lucky to get this one…..he was only there for a minute
😂

--
 
Well, not exactly a standard x-pan single shot, but i have grabbed into the trixbox a little bit. Two additional sensor frames. Place; Munich city, Königsplatz - Glyptothek (was one of the city fassade price winners 2023) 100ii gf110ts, iso80 1/200 f14. 3 images. hand hold, horizontal shift from left by 15mm, to the middle, 15mm to the right side.. Not perfect, a tripod would have been fine here. Never tested that with the 110ts lens before. byebye,richard

 

Attachments

  • 4399302.jpg
    4399302.jpg
    5.5 MB · Views: 0
Last edited:
Here's another portrait example, which illustrates a particular XPan challenge for which lots of shift is a good solution.

The tl/dr version is that XPan portrait orientation is harder than XPan landscape when you're standing at "ground level" (unless lots of sky is what you're after). That's why the few portrait XPan portrait examples we see that aren't mostly sky or mostly foreground often are taken from the top of a hill or a tall building. There are some workarounds that might work.

=====

This is a "ground level" picture of the Sleeman Brewing and Malting Company's factory in Guelph. Apologies for the really boring light. It's January in southern Ontario, the sun has been AWOL for weeks, and it was getting ready to snow again.

Sleeman Brewing and Malting, Guelph
Sleeman Brewing and Malting, Guelph

Let's say you want an image that looks like this, and your goal is to make a large print that people will inspect from a close distance. You have the usual options that don't involve shift. Three I can think of include the following:
  1. Use a wide angle lens in portrait orientation and stand so that that the top of what you want is at the top of the frame when the camera is level. Then crop the roughly top half of the frame to 65:24. From where I stood to make this picture, a 52mm lens would be the correct focal length.
  2. Stand where you need to get the perspective you want and point your lens up to get the top of the tanks in the frame, leaving lots of room around them. Use geometric corrections in software to straighten and then crop the tanks to the desired scene.
  3. Shoot a regular panorama of the whole scene with a longer focal length, stitch it together, correct verticals, and crop.
The first option is the most straightforward and predictable. My 50mm lens (which is actually around 52mm) would have done the job perfectly, but this approach would leave me with 2,455 x 6,648 pixels (on my GFX 100S) -- not ideal for the envisioned "large print".

I didn't try #2 and #3, but some people are really good at doing those moves. I don't like the uncertainty that comes with those two approaches, so I don't have much experience with them, especially #3.

My main camera is a digital view camera, so shift is an obvious fourth solution. The catch is that when you're standing at ground level, this needs a lot more shift than is normally possible.

For this scene, where I wanted a tight composition with little sky or foreground, I used a Fuji GX 125mm f/5.6 (one of the lenses from the old GX680 system that I've adapted). It has a 120mm image circle.

I started at +10mm rise, because I didn't want the road in the picture, and then made two more pictures at +20mm and +30mm rise. Cropped to 65:24, this gave me a file 6,154 wide x 16,667 tall on my GFX 100S. That's plenty of pixels for a large print.

A rise of 30mm needs an image circle of 109mm, which makes this Fuji GX lens one of the few I have that can pull off this move. Any lens designed to cover 4x5, or 6x9 with shift, would work too.

Unfortunately, 30mm of rise is well beyond what most (any?) tilt-shift lens can provide. The two amazing new Fuji GF tilt-shift lenses are limited to 15mm -- plenty for most applications, but not to duplicate this image exactly as I've done.

The obvious answers if you're using a shift lens is to change your position, use as much shift as you can, point up if you need to, and crop and straighten. Or if you don't like straightening, use as much shift as you can and use option #1 from above. Either will leave you with more pixels than option #1 without shift, but still a lot less than what's possible with more shift.
 
Shot using Xpan setting on the Hass.

Local clay quarry, now turned into a nature reserve. A few years ago the water was bright blue, attractive but very unhealthy, probably. It is now settling down and, when there isn't a storm brewing, a natural habitat for many sprecies of water birds.

e8d89ae5a6c34503a7c2e557382f4267.jpg

A nice day out walking but not many (any) photograhic possibilities.

The 38mm lens is proving itself to be an ideal companion to the X2D; not too heavy and a useful field of view. I know it "suffers" from vignetting when shooting white paper targets but in real life, this doesn't seem a problem.
 
Last edited:
Shot using Xpan setting on the Hass.

Local clay quarry, now turned into a nature reserve. A few years ago the water was bright blue, attractive but very unhealthy, probably. It is now settling down and, when there isn't a storm brewing, a natural habitat for many sprecies of water birds.

e8d89ae5a6c34503a7c2e557382f4267.jpg

A nice day out walking but not many (any) photograhic possibilities.

The 38mm lens is proving itself to be an ideal companion to the X2D; not too heavy and a useful field of view. I know it "suffers" from vignetting when shooting white paper targets but in real life, this doesn't seem a problem.
38mm is a very nice angle of view, and it works well in this format.

The first colour project I shot when I switched from black and white was a restored quarry. I wasn't in an XPan mood at the time, but looking at the images now many could have been in that format.

The pits are often below the water table, so that strange colour you saw could have been the groundwater before sediments had a chance to make everything cloudy again.
 
Loch Bad a' Ghaill, Coigach, Scotland
Loch Bad a' Ghaill, Coigach, Scotland

Stormy sunrise, Stac Polly from Sgurr an Fhidhleir (The Fiddler), Coigach, Scotland
Stormy sunrise, Stac Polly from Sgurr an Fhidhleir (The Fiddler), Coigach, Scotland

Sunrise, Loch Bad a' Ghaill, Coigach, Scotland
Sunrise, Loch Bad a' Ghaill, Coigach, Scotland

--
The camera is not your tool. The light is.
Tim
 
Nice thread, Rob.

Some stitched panoramas.

6abaede264b34abaae6d0971a504ed48.jpg
Like this one.
Oh thanks Bobby, I just saw this.

By the way for you all, I posted new images, and others which are not new but in a long postponed new presentation. Most are in panoramic formats built from stitched shots.

I took the risk of publishing large, since internet connections are fast enough for most of us, at least that's what I hope. I would be keen on knowing how things work on the other side of the pond, for speed, and if waiting 1-2-secs as here for images to load is acceptable, or if it takes much longer at a distance and I need to use lower quality compression.

I'm also interested in knowing if the galleries are compatible with most browsers. I made them with Lightroom and added my touch. They are not browsable with the iPhones for instance, maybe just due to the size.

I'd love to have your feedback

Paul's new galleries

Best viewed in full-screen on 2K.
 
Last edited:
Unusually for me, this was handheld. I'd already got this location in mind, but thought it wouldn't work as you're looking almost directly South, so the castle is backlit for most of the day. But the combination of bright but cloudy conditions and an incredibly still loch made it work.

I was driving home after a week further North and grabbed the camera as I knew this level of calm doesn't last long here. I'd taped over the IS switch on my GF45-100 - I found it gets knocked 'on' easily when removing from my bag - so had to rip that off to switch IS on.

No filters, but a bit of work in post.

View attachment d43cc117180a4d81acbdacbea9069e37.jpg
Ardvreck Castle, Loch Assynt

--
The camera is not your tool. The light is.
Tim
https://timtuckerphotography.com/blog
http://timtuckerphotography.com
https://www.instagram.com/timtuckerphotography/
 
Last edited:
First post 😄

Taken on a recent vacation in Southern Italy


Matera - Basilica Cattedrale di Matera "Maria Santissima della Bruna"

Cheers
Florian
 

Attachments

  • 4417791.jpg
    4417791.jpg
    8.1 MB · Views: 0
First post 😄

Taken on a recent vacation in Southern Italy


Matera - Basilica Cattedrale di Matera "Maria Santissima della Bruna"

Cheers
Florian
We don't often see the vertical kind. Nicely done and thanks for sharing.
 

Keyboard shortcuts

Back
Top