Is great to hear that. Framing with manual wide-angle lenses 28mm and 24mm has been one of my most important learning experiences, in fact, 28mm is the focal length of choice for documentary photography. Vivitar 28mm f/ 2.5 (Kino, Kiron)and Minolta Rokkors 24mm f 2.8 and 28mm f/2.5 are metal built and heavy enough to provide a bit of extra stability to the camera when you shot handheld. All these Japanese lenses have wonderful and precise mechanics so are a great investment. Also, Minolta 28 and even 24 have really not much noticeable barrel distortion and placed at the right height produce a very nice perspective with straight lines. Vivitar has especially a beautiful cinematic rendering and a wonderful warm lens flare. I'm also glad that you liked my Instagram feed since 75% of my photos were taken using Minoltas 24, 28 y Vivitar 28. For the rest, I just use a Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm, either f/1.7 or f1/.4. I think that just a wide-angle and a standard length of 50mm is all that is needed to shot a nice travel video. Hope you enjoy using those lenses as much as I do. Kind Regards and thanks a lot for your feedback.
@@enriquevp77 I also love my rokkor lenses. Currently I am using 58mm 1.4 and 135/2.8. They have something what modern lenses don't. I'm very excited about the 28mm I will use in the future. And thank you for telling me about vivita lenses. I'm going to find out about them. thanks!
@@grayjackal_ Totally Agreed, Minoltas are high-quality built lenses. That said the 58mm and the 135 are great lenses for portraits and extreme close-ups since you focus the attention on your main subject, while Wider focal lengths are more about the perspective and composition of your frame and they bring the epic vibe to the shot. I think they are also very helpful to gain extra confidence at the time of framing with the 58mm and 135mm. Definitely, you must take a step ahead in your photographic journey and try these wider focal lengths, I'm sure you will have excellent results. Kind Regards!
Muchas Gracias Rosario me da gusto leer tu comentario y también saber que estos videos son un buen medio seguir conectados compartiéndoles de estas anécdotas de viaje. ¡Muchos Saludos Amiga!
¡Gracias Héctor! Como te decía me pareció buena idea compartirles esta que es la primera nevada del invierno 2020, es por ello que en cuanto vi los primeros copos de nieve no dude en salir a tomar algunos planos para montar este video. ¡Muchos saludos!
so nice footage and so nice photo on your instagram. I bought these lenses after watching your video.
Is great to hear that. Framing with manual wide-angle lenses 28mm and 24mm has been one of my most important learning experiences, in fact, 28mm is the focal length of choice for documentary photography. Vivitar 28mm f/ 2.5 (Kino, Kiron)and Minolta Rokkors 24mm f 2.8 and 28mm f/2.5 are metal built and heavy enough to provide a bit of extra stability to the camera when you shot handheld. All these Japanese lenses have wonderful and precise mechanics so are a great investment. Also, Minolta 28 and even 24 have really not much noticeable barrel distortion and placed at the right height produce a very nice perspective with straight lines.
Vivitar has especially a beautiful cinematic rendering and a wonderful warm lens flare. I'm also glad that you liked my Instagram feed since 75% of my photos were taken using Minoltas 24, 28 y Vivitar 28. For the rest, I just use a Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm, either f/1.7 or f1/.4. I think that just a wide-angle and a standard length of 50mm is all that is needed to shot a nice travel video. Hope you enjoy using those lenses as much as I do. Kind Regards and thanks a lot for your feedback.
@@enriquevp77 I also love my rokkor lenses. Currently I am using 58mm 1.4 and 135/2.8. They have something what modern lenses don't. I'm very excited about the 28mm I will use in the future. And thank you for telling me about vivita lenses. I'm going to find out about them. thanks!
@@grayjackal_ Totally Agreed, Minoltas are high-quality built lenses. That said the 58mm and the 135 are great lenses for portraits and extreme close-ups since you focus the attention on your main subject, while Wider focal lengths are more about the perspective and composition of your frame and they bring the epic vibe to the shot. I think they are also very helpful to gain extra confidence at the time of framing with the 58mm and 135mm.
Definitely, you must take a step ahead in your photographic journey and try these wider focal lengths, I'm sure you will have excellent results. Kind Regards!
Wow muy buen video,me encantó el canto de las aves 🥰, saludos 🤗 !!!
Muchas Gracias Rosario me da gusto leer tu comentario y también saber que estos videos son un buen medio seguir conectados compartiéndoles de estas anécdotas de viaje. ¡Muchos Saludos Amiga!
Un abrazo Enrique, que video tan estupendo.¡Qué linda atmósfera! ❄
¡Gracias Héctor! Como te decía me pareció buena idea compartirles esta que es la primera nevada del invierno 2020, es por ello que en cuanto vi los primeros copos de nieve no dude en salir a tomar algunos planos para montar este video. ¡Muchos saludos!
Nice nice work buddy ✅
Thanks so much, I really appreciate it! 🙏🏼✨ I expected to get brighter colors buy maybe my camera profile was too flat 😅 Kind Regards!
What did you do with the picture? This is so bad...
Did you select the high res? He's stylized the footage in post.