Will Nikon Film SLR lenses be usable to Nikon Digital SLR cameras? I want to confirm because I heard they do.?

Question by nomo b: Will Nikon Film SLR lenses be usable to Nikon Digital SLR cameras? I want to confirm because I heard they do.?
Im just going into photography now. I know very little. I was recently given a Nikon film slr camera with a set of awesome lenses. I was planning to buy a Nikon digital slr camera and was wondering if I could use the film camera lenses on the digital camera. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

Best answer:

Answer by proshooter
Generally yes, although they may not have the full function of a new lens.

You may have to manually focus, that is turn the focus ring on the lens yourself rather than a motor doing it. The auto focus control system should still give some indication when it finds a point in focus.

Metering and exposure modes may be limited to manual only rather than the full range of automatic exposure modes.

Despite these limitations Nikon lenses are very good optically and worth using.

http://digital-photography.suite101.com/article.cfm/old_lenses_on_digital_cameras

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Good film SLR camera for a beginner?

Question by : Good film SLR camera for a beginner?
I’m going to London and Paris this spring, and I’m interested in taking some film photographs when I’m there. I’ve heard nothing but bad reviews about the toy film cameras that you can buy, and I was looking for some possible options for a solid beginners film SLR camera, and maybe some tips to start using it! Thanks!

Best answer:

Answer by Jim A
That’s correct, the toys are just toys.

Canon and Nikon make excellent 35mm cameras. But since most on line sites that I’ve seen no longer carry them, shop a good local camera store. They can help you more than we can.

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Canon U.S.A., the Official Digital Camera of the Sundance Film Festival, to

Simon Blint, Director of Visitor Relations at the SF MOMA, Yeah You Jerk, Photography is Not a Crime
top rated slr digital cameras

Image by Thomas Hawk
If you think that photographers should not be subject to this kind of harassment digg this here.

Simon Blint, Director of Visitor Relations at the SF MOMA is a first rate jerk.

Recently I blogged about my excitement regarding the San Francisco MOMA’s decision to begin allowing photography in their permanent collection after years of maintaining a closed no photography policy. Directly because of this change in policy, I decided to purchase a family membership in order to support the museum, both with my artistic energy and financially. I was excited to begin spending regular time exploring and documenting the museum.

Unfortunately, I should have known better than to really believe that the San Francisco MOMA was serious about opening up the art and architecture entrusted to them to the general public.

After purchasing my family membership and visiting the museum today I was forcibly thrown out of the museum by two museum security guards at the direction of the Director of Visitor Relations Simon Blint.

My crime? Taking a photograph from the second floor stairs in the SFMOMA’s atrium (an area where the SF MOMA’s own website explicitly says photography is allowed).

You can see the photograph that I took when I was thrown out at the top of this post.

During the course of my interaction with Blint I told him that:

1. I was a new member of the museum and that I’d been in contact with Thea Stein in the Marketing and Communications Department of the museum who had confirmed the recent change in museum policy with me personally regarding photography in the museum.

2. That the SF MOMA’s own website explicitly allows photography in the atrium.

3. That I would be blogging my forcible eviction from the MOMA.

Blint told me that "he did not care" and that he needed to "protect" his employees — employees that might appear in my photographs. I was not shooting with a tripod. I was not shooting with a flash. I was being quiet and respectful of the area and the other patrons.

Blint on the other hand was hostile, accusatory and refused to even examine my photographs or allow me to share with him what I was doing with my art. He accused me of using a "telephoto" lens to spy on his staff from the public staircase on the second floor. Blint obviously knows nothing of photography because the 14mm ultra wide angle lens on my camera body was about the furthest thing possible from a telephoto lens. He refused to discuss this, refused to examine my photographs, refused to consider it at all and simply had me ejected with two security guards.

Ironically Blint also tried to eject my friend torbakhopper who was hanging out with me at the museum today and he wasn’t even taking photographs. He finally relented on his case and told him that he could stay if he wanted but that I was going to be forcibly ejected.

Blint refused to escalate the situation to a superior even though I told him I’d been in contact with museum personnel. He was on his own personal power trip and misused and abused the authority entrusted to him for the public benefit to harass, humiliate and embarrass a paying member of the museum. Photography is not a crime

I believe that I was very much targeted in this case because I was using a digital SLR. There were plenty of people taking photographs of the atrium using point and shoots that Simon did not target, but I think that it was the fact that I was using a larger DSLR that made me a target. Rather than try to understand what I and my art were about Simon felt the smarter way to deal with the situation was simply to kick me out of his museum.

While I might be able to understand if my ejection from the museum had been at the hand of an overzealous security guard who was simply uninformed about the SF MOMA’s change in policy regarding photography in their museum, when this ejection came directly from the Director of Visitor Relations I find this to be unacceptable.

If the museum has a photography allowed policy in their atrium as explicitly expressed on their website and someone identifies themselves as a photographer, artist and paying and supporting member of museum I would expect less hostility, aggression and harassment. Photography is an art and those of us who choose to practice the great art of street photography ought not be targeted by bullies like Blint. Many of the great artists, artists being shown in the SF MOMA itself were practitioners of street photography. It is ironic that the great Cartier-Bresson, who took thousands of photographs of unsuspecting people in his work, hangs in the museum while a photographer practicing the same type of work gets ejected by a power-trippy asshole. It’s hypocritical and disappointing.

It is unfortunate that one of my first experiences as a paying member of the SF MOMA had to be full of hatred, bitterness and harassment.

Update: The SFMOMA Responds to this incident here.

Canon U.S.A., the Official Digital Camera of the Sundance Film Festival, to
Street teams will be dispersed throughout the festival, handing out special "Project Imagin8ion" picture frames to encourage consumers to capture photos that best represent each of the eight movie themes that were featured in the "Project Imagin8ion" …
Read more on MarketWatch (press release)

What Kodak Needs to Do to Survive
Despite having invented the first digital camera way back in the 1970s, Kodak has lagged behind more innovative competitors in the consumer camera market. In 2002 the company brought one of the first full-frame digital SLRs to market. …
Read more on PC Magazine

what is the better film slr camera Canon or Nikon?

Question by Andrea c: what is the better film slr camera Canon or Nikon?
im trying to settle an argument with my brother. i say canon because i have a canon slr digital camera but i dont really know much about nikon…soooo help!!!
8]

Best answer:

Answer by awesomobob
thats like saying who makes better cars, Mercedes or BMW, anyone who owns a BMW is going to say BMW and anyone who drives a Mercedes is going to say Mercedes,

same goes with cameras,

as far as flim slrs go, theyre all pretty much equal since the image is captured on a third party film (instead of a digital sensor made by either nikon or canon)

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Will canon film camera lenses fit digital canon lenses?

Question by : Will canon film camera lenses fit digital canon lenses?
I have recently bought a Canon EOS 30 film camera and I wanted to buy more lenses but I’m not sure which ones to buy. I can use the same lenses as the digital Canon EOS versions?

Best answer:

Answer by Someone who reads
Yes. But the focal length won’t be the same equivalent as the digital camera. But the lenses will fit.

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Are there any stores where I can buy a SLR film camera?

Question by cnewman90: Are there any stores where I can buy a SLR film camera?
I live in Johnson County Kansas and I need to buy an SLR camera. I would prefer to buy one in store and not online.

Best answer:

Answer by thysilentcreed
Sorry man, all I can say is buy one off of Amazon. Free shipping and all is great too. Thats your best bet!

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Will the lenses from a Nikon F60 (SLR film camera)work with a Nikon D3100 digital SLR camera?

Question by Paul H: Will the lenses from a Nikon F60 (SLR film camera)work with a Nikon D3100 digital SLR camera?

Best answer:

Answer by thankyoumaskedman
They probably can work, but they will not autofocus. They may require manual exposure, and if so they probably won’t meter.

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Q&A: What digital SLR camera lens is equivalent to the 35-80mm lens on film SLRs?

slr camera lens
by Arkku

Question by Ali: What digital SLR camera lens is equivalent to the 35-80mm lens on film SLRs?
I am looking for a lens for my Olympus E300 that has the equivalent focal length of my regular SLR’s 35-80mm lens.

Best answer:

Answer by Rob Nock
That depends entirely on the size of the IMAGE SENSOR and can vary from one manufacturer to another. The easiest way to determine this is to find out what the “crop factor” value is for the model of the camera you want to use. For example a crop factor of 1 would mean that the sensor is exactly the same size as a full frame 35mm camera and the lens would be exactly the same.

For a camera with a 1.5x crop factor the lens would be 34/1.5 or 24mm (rounded up) to 80/1.5 or 54mm so a 1.5x crop factor would need a 24-54mm range.

For a camera with a 2x crop factor it would be 34/2 or 17mm to 80/2 or 40mm so the lens would be 17-40mm.

Smaller sensors allow better power management, smaller & lighter camera and lens construction and improved optical designs for lenses to be used with sensors (for design reasons image sensors need more direct or “straighter” light paths than film). The sensors also generate less heat which may cause image deterioration when a camera is used continuously.

The advantage of larger sensors is that they can have physically larger “pixels” so they are less likely to have a bleed over from adjacent pixels. The bleed causes image deterioration in the form of “noise”.

Typical crop factors are in the range from 1.3 – 2.0. Most camera companies use whatever they want but some cameras have adopted a standard called Four/Thirds which has a 2x crop factor.

Hope this helps.
Email if you have more specific questions.

EDIT: Additional info, the Olympus 14-45 “kit” lens is roughly equivalent to a 28-90mm and would be very comparable. I have a lightly used one for sale. If you are interested contact me via email.

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Can you use a film slr lens on a new digital slr camera?

Question by julian: Can you use a film slr lens on a new digital slr camera?
I have some old 35 mm slr film lens (nikon) and was wondering if they will fit on a new digital slr camera that’s possibly a canon will they fit and will it work? I put the nikon lens on a
film pentax camera and it worked but idk if it’s different! Help!

Best answer:

Answer by Lizzie
If it fits, it will work. They made many new slr’s to fit the old lens for many brands since lens are so expensive. Try it out first on something not important just to be sure that you don’t miss a shot that you can’t get back once missed.

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