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Lens tests on the BlackMagic Pocket Cinema Camera (BMPCC)
  • 232 Replies sorted by
  • @Cid Thanks dude. The Vimeo quality sucks, no way to show all the RAW splendor. I am beginning to fall in love with the SK optics, superb resolution and colors and they marry quite well with the BM sensor, not as well with Bolex Switars. Hope you don't have to wait too long for the camera.

  • @kriscanonizado, did you have to modify the lens any for it to work? I might have to look into this lens

  • Had an opportunity today to test the Cosmicar/Pentax 16mm 1.4 and compared it to the 16mm 1.4 Schneider Cinegon already mentioned here. Well, an unfair fight, the Cosmicar can be had for peanuts, while the Cinegon is a serious 16mm lens with S-16 coverage.

    As you might have expected, the Cosmicar is a toy lens in comparison. It doesn't vignette on the BMPCC, but the corners are very soft with lots of CA and it has massive barrel distortion, approaching a fisheye look. Even stopping down to 4 doesn't help much, and the T-stop WO is half a stop darker than the same f-stop of the Cinegon.

    Might be useful for effects, since the center is reasonably sharp, but it doesn't approach the 25mm Cosmicar/Pentax, which even covers the GH2 (with some corner softness) and isn't too shabby for it's size on the BMPCC.

  • This time I tested the Kowa 8mm f1.4 lens that a Chinese seller is offering with an MFT mount already attached.

    The Kowa is really sharp even WO, CA is visible in the corners but not stronger than in a Schneider Cinegon 10mm, which is considerably softer in the corners. Even when stopped down the Schneider is not getting to the same sharpness in the corners.

    First one is the Kowa 8mm WO, shot on a GH2 in photo mode for resolution. The red frame is the image area of the BMPCC.

    For comparison the Schneider Cinegon 10mm at 1.8 (i.e. WO).

    The only weak point is the massive moustache distortion, which is much less in the Schneider. I suppose that for machine vision, resolution was the main target when designing the lens, since distortion can be eliminated by software.

    I hope to test an Arri/Zeiss 8mm next week.

    Kowa_8mm_@1,4.jpg
    4976 x 2800 - 1M
    Cinegon_10mm_@1,8.jpg
    4976 x 2800 - 1000K
  • Anyone else use the Panasonic 12-35 on the Pocket Cam recently? I picked one up for car mount stuff with the pocket for the OIS and micro jitter problems but damn is the barrel distortion horrible!!! Not sure it's usable.

  • @vicharris Try the Olympus 12-35 (which I've seen used for $1000 on this site) and your jaw will drop.

  • @spacewig The only reason I was looking at the lens was IOS and the Oly doesn't provide that.

  • Yes, on the wide side it distorts considerably.

  • @vicharris It's strange, I use Lumix 12-35 2.8 every day on GH2 and Olympus OMD EM5 (without in-body lens correction) and I don't feel any barrel distortion. But I begin to notice it at Pocket. I very like its POV 35-101mm range, it more useful than on GH2, very good for close-ups at BMPCC. I even decided to buy second lens 12-35 2.8 OIS second hand (at half price) from friend.

  • @act Yep, it's great on the GH2 for sure. Looks like wacky fun time house on the pocket.

  • I wonder why it looks good on the Oly too, but on the GH2 it's fine for sure, since it gets corrected.

    In the BMPCC there's no correction of any kind, and it shows on the 12-35 and on the 7-14 on the wide end, getting better in the middle range and is gone on the long end.

  • Olympus Micro Four Thirds cameras correct geometric distortion on MFT lenses, same as Panasonic bodies. It's only chromatic aberration that Olympus bodies don't correct.

  • Ahhh, that's it then. Sucks this lens is not good till you get past 25 or so on the pocket. Odd though cause my 14-140 doesn't have the same problem.

  • Well, the 14-140 is slower and not as wide…

  • Lumix 7-14 on BMPCC very straight with no visible distortion from 7mm. I didn't make any scientific tests, I just see what acceptable for my eyes.

  • Hmmm, see my very first post in this thread.

  • @nomad Thank you for your clear technical input. You just prove that nothing is perfect at this world. But, we live at real world with its limitations, and it isn't too bad. Take real picture of 7-14 lens and see you can't find any disturbing distortion. You just can call it character. I really glad that I haven't seen your test picture on Kowa 8mm 1.4, the test looks so horrible, I've been never buy that lens. People some times don't want know truth. :)

  • May be there are some OFX pluggins for DaVinci resolve with presets to correct lens distortions?

  • Actually, I'll keep the Kowa myself. I just like to give folks here a clear indication what it's good for and what not. Should be fine for skaters, but not for architecture ;-)

    BTW, the Arri/Zeiss Distagon 8mm 1:2 that a friend adapted to BMPCC has far less distortion, but vignettes. Plus, you won't find it in decent condition anywhere near the price of the Kowa.

    Choose your poison.

    A very quick google brought me this: https://github.com/kylemcdonald/ofxCameraFilter A filter that distorts should undistort too.

  • hi guys... I'm kinda obsessed by the Olympus 50-200 f2.8-3.5 HG lens with MMF-3 adapter to use it on the Pocket along with the GH3 and GX7 to probably replace my Nikon 80-200 2.8, but I can't find a single review, test or anything about it. Any thoughts? tks :)

  • @cantsin

    You wrote: "Yes, do have multiple Schneiders (17mm, 25mm, 17-90mm), Kerns (10mm, 17mm, 25mm, 75mm) and Angenieux (12-120). They produced pleasing images on the GH2 because they made the camera's harsh, oversharpened, sterile video image look more organic. But the huge disappointment came on the Blackmagic Pocket despite its more suitable 1"/S16 sensor size. Except for the newest, most modern megapixel video lenses by manufacturers like Kowa, classical c-mount lenses simply don't resolve 2K/FullHD. On the BMPC's raw image, this doesn't look 'filmic' but just blurry, or, truth to tell: just shit."

    This might be more of an aesthetical judgment than by numbers. Some Schneiders and Kerns resolve quite well, but like most older lenses their coating is not as good as today – in particular the rear coating, which was not so important with film emulsion. So, they are soft in contrast WO (like many heritage Nikkors too), but the detail is there. After all, 50 ASA film had quite some resolution and with the latest developments in analog even some higher sensitivities. Plus, the perceived resolution of film is better than the grain because of temporal integration in our brains.

    That Angenieux 12-120 sucks, I agree. They made far better ones than that.

    The Kowas are much more contrasty, yes, but the wider ones suffer distortion big time. I suppose nobody cares in the kind of application they were initially made for. Plus, the focus ring is so close to the camera that their handling is not the best either, just like tiny Kerns.

    Please note that I don't talk about cheap C-mount lenses made for SD-TV initially. Most of these are too soft.

    And then: "Another factor for this disappointment: 16mm movie film camera lenses were constructed to take into account the bending of the film in the film transport and the different distances of single color layers in the emulsion."

    Sorry, I never heard of this. Can you please point me to a source? AFAIK the film was considered planar and camera constructions did their best to keep it that way, but then I know I don't know it all.

    What I know is that for Bolex RX lenses the prism was taken into account. That makes Kern lenses for RX up to 25mm softer on MFT.

    You: "This makes them suboptimal/unsharp on video sensors, especially at shorter focal lengths. It's the same issues rangefinder (Leica) photo camera lenses create on mirrorless full frame bodies (such as the Sony Alpha 7/7R). You don't get those problems with adapted vintage SLR lenses because of their much longer flange mount/greater distance to the film layer."

    No, it's not the same issue. Flange distance of C-mount is 17.5mm, while Leica-M is 27.8. But the FF-sensor is much larger, and the problem is caused by the angle of light hitting the sensor from wides in the corners. Sony tried to counter-act this with improved (angled) micro-lenses on the A7 and A7R – with limited success.

    "And finally, you need ND filters + IR cut filters on any lens you're putting on the Pocket, and that is difficult to impossible with c-mount lenses because of their often esoteric filter thread sizes."

    I agree, but I'd never hang a heavy filter on a tiny lens with a small adapter, I'd use a matte box anyway.

    "Ah, yeah, and regarding Lumix MFT lenses being all S.H.I.T.: once you put them on a camera like the Pocket which doesn't software-correct its distortions (and can't do that anyway because its video signal isn't downsampled from a higher sensor resolution, but recorded in native 1080p) and its purple fringing, you see how terrible their optics really are."

    Well, true, the 7-14 and the 12-35 distort quite a bit on the wide end, but apart from that they are not so bad. Actually I hate any motorized lens for filming, so we can agree on this one.

    "All the more in comparison to Nikon lenses that actually cost less (and adapt and perform superbly with the Speedbooster.)"

    My Nikkor 1.4 50mm is very soft WO…

    One last thing: Softer lenses might help with the awful moiré on a BMPCC ;-)

  • Anyone seen tests with new Zeiss superspeeds on the bmpcc? I´d be very interested in this as it could be a great choice for certain productions.. I can´t rent any of these near me, they´d have to be shipped in so I´d be glad to have a look first.

    12-35 panny is actually pretty useful for once on the bmpcc in my opinion. It doesn´t look harshly oversharpened like on the gh2 f.i. pretty handy and neat although not really exciting. Voigt 17.5mm is a great match, as a "normal" focal length.

  • Yeah - I would bet the 17mm focal length lenses are best if choosing a single prime to shoot narrative on the Pocket as it yields an equivalent of a 28mm on a GH2...which I find is best all around for narrative filming. But I think Sigma 18-35 looks better on Pocket than Panny 12-35.

  • @nomad +1 to all you explained. I can second your points are all AFAIK, film emulsion being flat, C mount RX lenses being sub optimal on anything but a RX Bolex (unless you want to shoot at f3.2), and my Nikkor 50mm f1.4 AIS is also soft at 1.4, they all are as I understand, and great at 2.0.

  • anybody experienced the Fuji 1.2/12.5-75mm? I have a offer of a lens in a good condition but I am a little afraid that it will not cover the sensor