Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/04/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I know it's almost heresy to suggest it, but seriously consider the regular Summilux, particularly if you can find a very good used one, as I did. My testing shows that from f/2.8 down, it's every bit as good as the Summicron. It isn't as good as the Summicron at f2.0, but at f/1.4 it beats the pants off it. <g> The ASP versions is clearly to be desired, but if you want or need the speed for the type of shooting that you do, the 35mm Summilux is a great lens and only 1mm longer than the Summicron -- making it a wonderful travel lens. I'm a fanatic, and take lots of equipment with me when I'm shooting nature and landscape, either 35mm or 645, but when I'm traveling on business and can't take more than one body and lens, the M6 and 35mm Summilux is it. Compared to a point and shoot with a typical f/2.8 of f/3.5, the world is a different place at f/1.4. If I can take one more lens then the 90mm f2.8 Elmarit is a good companion -- no speed, but very small and light with superb image quality. Michael At 04:42 PM 14/04/96 EDT, you wrote: > >The next bit of advice that I'd appreciate concerns lenses: I'd like >to get a 35mm Summicron lens. There was some discussion a while back >favoring the old 8 element Summicron. Are there any 35mm lenses that >I should strongly prefer over others? Are there any to avoid? >I won't even think about getting the aspheric Summilux, but are other >35 Summilux lenses worth considering (the price range appears to be >almost the same as for Summicrons)? > >Thanks again, >Paul > >