That is amazing! OK- now I need a 180 f2.8, LOL!!I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 100.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
BTW, I really, really really miss Kodachrome. What a great film it was.I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 100.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
McCurry mentioned that every year he got new camera bodies from National G. and his lenses would last a couple of years. He never used protective filters and his 180mm had a big nick on the front element. Talk about equipment being nothing but a tool.That is amazing! OK- now I need a 180 f2.8, LOL!!I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 100.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
I know, right?? What an amazing ride he must have taken with NG.McCurry mentioned that every year he got new camera bodies from National G. and his lenses would last a couple of years. He never used protective filters and his 180mm had a big nick on the front element. Talk about equipment being nothing but a tool.That is amazing! OK- now I need a 180 f2.8, LOL!!I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 100.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
I paid $169.95.
I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 64.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
There does seem to be a discrepancy. He also had the 105mm f1.8 lens in his bag along with the 180mm.I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 64.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
Interesting. When I spoke with McCurry, he told me that he used the 105 f/2.5 glass for the Afghan Girl image.
I meet Steve McCurry in 1990. We talked some while over the course of a few days. He said he used his 180mm f2.8ED lens for the Afghan Girl. There seems to be a discrepancy.
When I met him he was on a National G. shoot and his kit included 2 Nikon FM2n/MD12 bodies, 24mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 180mm f2.8ED, and 300mm f4.5 (which was in hotel room). And always used Kodachrome 25 or 64.
McCurry told me he was at a refuge camp and snapped two photos of the girl then looked down at his camera when he looked up she was gone. He knew immediately he had a good shot, but not how good. He said he thought she was an angel and was obsessed to find her afterwords returning many times to locate her.
I know this is old but. I like the dog's. the question is what do we think.Nikon 105mm f/2.5. Picked it up on ebay for 80.00. What do you think?
1. Missie
Test shot- vintage lens by Peeb OK, on Flickr
2. Riley
Shot 2- testing 40 year old lens by Peeb OK, on Flickr