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Brock Burwell April 30th, 2014 12:59 PM

Best Interview Lens
 
Any suggestions on what you would consider the best lens for interviews? I guess even the best "type" of lens for interviews would be good to know. I was told here once that my 50mm 1.8 probably wouldn’t be the best lens for an interview for some reason (I don't remember why).
So is a long prime like a 100mm 2.8 better for interviews? If so, why?

I do a lot of sit down interviews and I want to make sure I'm getting the best footage possible.

I shoot on a canon T3i

Donald McPherson April 30th, 2014 01:15 PM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
It could depend on how large or small the room is.

Jody Arnott May 1st, 2014 05:56 AM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
I think it would depend on factors like the size of the room, distance of the subject from the camera, etc. I just purchased the Sigma 18-35 f1.8 which I intend to use for interviews. It has a small zoom but should be flexible enough for reframing, and it's very fast so should be good to get a shallow DoF.

Robert Benda May 1st, 2014 06:34 AM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
The best lens sort of depends. A longer lens will give you more compression, and is generally more flattering to the subject. I've seen photographers who will shoot with their longest lens possible to take advantage of those two facts.j

Kevin McRoberts May 1st, 2014 12:48 PM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
The answer is "the one that best conveys the image you want to present."

yeah. that simple.

In some cases, you may want to get close and intimate (personal appeals, testimonies, etc etc). In this case a longer lens closer up is generally better.

In some cases, you may want to present your interviewee planted firmly in their environment (ie, if the interviewee is talking about a scrapyard they've been working at for 70 years, I may want to see at least a suggestion of the scrapyard, not just some colorful out of focus mush behind them).

Green screen, void, and whiteout type backgrounds typically don't benefit from shallow depth of field, so in those cases fast lenses will usually lose out to sharp lenses with good flare control characteristics.

Sometimes it's simple practicality... I won't shoot a very nice looking interview with a 100mm lens in a university professor's 10' square office, unless I just want to interview his right eye, and it might be awkward to plant an interviewee in a director's chair in a cavernous studio and then sidle right up their face with a 24mm. There may be inadequate natural lighting and no time/availability to rig lighting, so I may have to go with the fastest lens I have just to get correct exposure.

No easy answer. Your 50/1.8 and 100/2.8 are both great interview lenses in the right circumstances, and both terrible interview lenses in the wrong circumstances.

Chris Medico May 1st, 2014 06:28 PM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
If space allows my go-to lens is a 85mm. People look great when shot in this range and the camera is far enough back to not be as imposing.

I recommend not going wider than about 35mm. Otherwise the camera will be up in their face.

Jon Fairhurst May 5th, 2014 01:31 PM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
The 50/1.8 isn't bad on a crop camera. (I use an 85 on full frame.) Its worst aspect is its focus ring, which doesn't come in to play for most seated interviews using a tripod. You could always upgrade to an EF 50/1.4 or ZE 50/1.4. The ZE 50/2 Makro is an especially great lens that would be a big improvement for use outside of interviews.

You could also get an 85mm or 100mm lens, but these are best for true closeups, rather than head and shoulder interviews. Closeups for interviews often make people seem under a microscope. It can make people seem overly emotional or look like you are probing for guilt. In narrative work, actors need to be very subtle to make a closeup work well. A small lift of an eyebrow can speak volumes.

I'd stick with the 50/1.8 unless you want to meet some additional needs.

You might also consider diffusion filters. I've been using GlimmerGlass from Tiffen. It adds a touch of glamour and smooths skin slightly. I saw some recent tests of Digital Diffusion filters (also from Tiffen) that look even better. The DigiDiffs smooth skin nicely without smearing bright lights in the scene as broadly. It makes the effect less noticeable while still smoothing blemishes.

A filter would be a less expensive improvement than a new lens. :)

Oren Arieli May 6th, 2014 03:54 PM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
As others have said, there really isn't a 'best' lens. It's more like a favorite list, so I'll include mine. The Rokinon 85mm f1.4 along with a focal reducer, which improves the sharpness, and gives you a looser framing. Otherwise, I'm enjoying Sony's 50mm f1.4 (Alpha), but I'm guessing you wouldn't be able to use that on your Canon.

Dylan Couper May 9th, 2014 12:13 AM

Re: Best Interview Lens
 
For the dollar, for Canon?
Nikon 35mm f2 AIS with a Canon adapter.
Nikon 50mm f1.4 AIS with a Canon adapter.
Nikon 24mm f2.8 AIS with a Canon adapter.

You'll rarely want anything longer than 50mm on APS-C for an interview (if you do then the 85mm of course) as it isn't a dramatic close up and you want to stay more near the natural FOV angles. Those three will cover whatever you need on the day. The exception would be if you needed to change frame during the interview, in which case you'd want a zoom. The 24-70 is the right range, from whichever manufacturer you want. I love the 18-35 1.8 but it's not the right focal length for interviews.

FWIW to other posters, the Canon 50 1.8 is ok glass but a bit of a chinzy lens. Spend the extra money on the 50m f1.4.


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