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  2. They already have a 10mm full-frame MF fisheye - https://7artisans.store/products/10mm-f-2-8-ii-ultra-wide-angle-full-frame-fisheye-lens-for-e-l-r-z-1 The projection is stereographic, 185 diagonal, 15cm, f2.8-16, 602g. This new lens is 15cm f2.5-16 so the design seems to have been slightly updated, but I expect it to be a full-frame lens.
  3. Hello, like in the title, I think I am ready to start considering an upgrade on my equipment. I am currently using a GoPro 12 with 3 inon wet lens, with tray, floater, and a tripod for shooting macro and video with fixed camera I am now evaluating what will be my next system, since with the new mission 1 realese with new form factor, and new high price, I am oriented to go on the next level, but I feel overwhelmed a bit by the choice. I don't have an exact budget yet, but since it's an upgrade on the current one, I start evaluating system from 2500€ and up. I'd like a suggestion on the camera body, lens option, tray and lights, but mainly I have to decide the camera. I'd like to keep the GoPro flexibility under water, where I can swap the wet lenses from wide, to macro, to super macro, ( by this I mean I'd like to have a system that allow me to be able to shoot almost everything without the need for example of a lens change inside the housing), to have a good balance between performance and size, without being too heavy to travel. Also, the size of the setup underwater would ideally be not much bigger than the current one, to allow me to film in small spots. Here is a picture for reference of the current setup
  4. Today
  5. That is what I am, thinking, otherwise the FLs make no sense.
  6. No I'm talking about the Canon 8-15 with Metabones in reply to the original question about a Canon 8-15 with Metabones, with 2x nose fitting into the Metabones which requires the latest version if I recall correctly as earleir versions were smaller ID. I 'll edit the text to make this clearer.
  7. The biggest issue is actually that if they make this lens in SONY mount, it will mount directly to a Sony body, no need for a converter incorporating the additional back focus needed for the DSLR lens. This is what allows the Canon 8-15 to work the Sony TC with the nose of the TC inside the converter. I think also the exceptional optical quality of the Canon 8-15 helps it work as well as it does with the 2x. TC magnify the image and the aberrations so the lenses that work well with them are exceptionally good optics.. Certainly be nice to have a native Sony fisheye, but it would be restricted to the Kenko TC, which as I recall doesn't have as good optical quality in the 2x version compared to the Sony TC.
  8. The Backscatter HF-1 Float is done. I've done several test dives on a pair of floats and they worked well. I am making another pair now that drops about 20 more grams of buoyancy. This morning I designed the Atom float and sized them to provide 140 grams of buoyancy against the 160 grams weight of the Atom's in water. Leaving it 20 grams negative. The draft print came out great. I trimmed it bit more after the draft to fine tune the target buoyancy. Atom Float +140 grams:
  9. Yesterday
  10. Hi Paul, Honestly, the best starting point is right on the Blackmagic Design website. Their official training section has free dedicated video lessons just for the Color Page. You can even download the Colorist Guide PDF along with the original media files so you can practice on the exact same clips they use. For YouTube channels that show real industry workflows: Cullen Kelly or Darren Mostyn. their tutorials are very technical and professional. But if you need something a bit more accessible, Casey Faris is great for beginners and intermediate users. But I agree with you, underwater color grading is indeed an entirely different discipline. Water acts as a massive cyan filter that selectively absorbs light. Most generic underwater tutorials fail because they simply push the temperature slider towards orange. This breaks the image by introducing artificial color noise into channels that contain zero actual data. When dealing with 10-bit Log files shot underwater, you have enough data depth to rebuild the image, but you need a specific approach rather than standard primary wheels. Usually I get that magenta fringe while trying to remove the green. What happens is actually color math. Magenta is the exact opposite of green on the color wheel, so when you use the global tint slider to subtract the green, the software automatically pushes the entire image toward magenta. Because your underwater footage is already missing all that red information, this adjustment will not give you a neutral white balance. It just ends up turning your background water purple. Another thing to keep in mind is that relying on the primary temperature and tint wheels will often just break the image. Instead, open the curves panel and use the Hue vs Hue curve. Select the specific green wavelength of the water and shift that point slightly toward blue. This changes the green cast into a standard water color without bleeding magenta into the rest of the frame. You can also use the Color Warper for this, which lets you do really precise vector manipulation without messing up your global white balance. Just grab the control points in the green and cyan regions and pull them directly toward the blue region to neutralize the green. Hope this helps. Ciao
  11. Sounds like an ASP-C that is mislabeled as FF to me
  12. 10mm would normally seem like an APS-C fisheye 1.5X=15mm 1.6X=16mm fisheye. If you look for reviews of the 7artisans 10mm FF fisheye it is 185 degrees and covers the full frame, it also gets very good reviews.
  13. Well I currently have the N100-N120 and metabones V setup; but no lens, dome or TC. So I'm not invested too much in it if this offers a more compact or cheaper option with similar IQ.
  14. 10mm is oddball for FF, like kind of a circle? Seems like a lens with very limited usefulness for us.
  15. Recently I've moved from Final Cut Pro, to Adobe Premiere and now with Davinci Resolve. It's super powerful and I'm enjoying it. I just wonder, does anyone know of some intermediate to advanced tutorials or courses I can sign up for? I would love to really dive deeper (pun intended) in colour grading, dynamic KeyFrames, power windows panel, etc. I also find underwater videos quite different from land-based videos so most of the tutorials on YouTube are a bit hard to follow (land-based videos) What would I like to achieve? I would go up a few levels from basic colour grading like what I have here of some manta rays. I shoot with a Sony A7V, most of the time with slog3. Any recommendations welcomed! WhatsApp Video 2026-05-24 at 19.30.25.mp4
  16. Not sure how 7Artisans came up with 10mm for full frame fisheye but they already have one that is MF and 185 degrees with minimum focus of 15cm.
  17. There are several factors: #1.: the prodruding element(s) of the Sony TC(s): the mechanical exception, i.e. TCs that work with almost any lens, are the Kenko TCs, that do not have such protruding elements. Native TCs (Sony, Canon EF, Canon RF, e.g.) have protruding elements that make it impossible to mount the TCs on most lenses, except the lenses for that the TCs have been designed for... #2.: The electronic communication of Sony TCs is often blocked by the firmware, even when the native TC fits mechanically, unless it is a lens that is approved by Sony to work with the native TCs... #3.: An exception is the arrangement Canon EF 8-15mm/Metabones V (Canon-EF to Sony FE)/Sony TC (1.4x or 2x), where the glassless adapter provides the space for the protruding element of the native TC(s) and the camera is communicating without problems with the TC/adapter/lens arrangement (It must be said, however, that this communication could potentially stop to work with any firmware update of the camera)... => It would be great in case it is possible to use the new AF fisheye lens with native Sony TCs, but it would be a very pleasant surprise for me in case it is possible (even if it is possible mechanically and electronically, there remains to be seen how the optical IQ is)... Wolfgang
  18. Still no autofocus fisheye for APS-C Sony?
  19. What makes you think you can't use the Sony TC?
  20. A 10mm FF must be rectilinear, probably need a huge dome.
  21. We were very happy with the image quality of the MFO-3. But we never tested the MFO-3 in combination with the 1.4 TC
  22. Also looks like it is available for Pre-order including the dive case. Unfortunately it looks like the dive case has the same mediocre button on top, even though they made the one on the camera better. This top button has been the one reason I have looked at other housings, but never been willing to pay 20x for a housing simply for a better 'shutter' button. Hopefully the new one still works better! It is unclear from the post referenced above whether the user was just using the camera without housing to 20m (and liked the buttons) or was using it in the housing. Eagerly awaiting more underwater imagery from this camera.
  23. If you want to measure what you really need in terms of powerbank, I would buy one of those USB-C charge monitor that inserts between power source and equipment. check the values on the screen of V, Amps, Watt when the camera is on and running. This will tell you the PD mode in place and amounts of watts needed. consider a powerbank that is able to deliver the same amount of watts (W) to its pins. Warning: between modes and phases (camera turning on, record starting), that can change. then consider the capacity of the powerbank (Wh) of the battery you need by deriving the number of mAh needed to cope with the PD mode which will set Amps and Volts to deliver the needed watts. You can also do something else: Consider the power the internal battery deliver : P = Vout x mAh = Wh Add a multiplier factor of P to the capacity (and time) you want to add up in extra to the battery Look for a powerbank of that capacity. The first method is probably more precise. The tricky thing is to think in terms of capacity (Wh) rather than fiddling with V and I as this is the principle of PD. The powerbank is doing the work to output power properly.
  24. Some underwater shots from the Mission 1 - seems pretty good for no lights.
  25. This is interesting... You say the Sony 2x TC will fit into the Laowa 8-15mm f/2.8 fisheye lens? In case it fits mechanically and electronically it will be very interesting to see photois made with Sony 1.4x and 2x TCs...

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