Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/09/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Most contributions on this subject equate flare with ghost images or secondary images. This is only part of the story. The official definition of 'flare' is: non-image forming light, more or less evenly distributed on the film plane. This light enters the lens, reflected from the subject and/or from lightsources illuminating the subject and obliquely entering the lens directly. This type of flare is degrading the image quality by lowering the overall contrast, and washing out the very fine details by destroying the micro contrast. You can easlisy see this phenomenon for yourself if you compare two pictures taken in exactly identical situations, one with a lens prone to image degrading flare (like the Summilux 35mm) and one which has good flare control (like the Summilux-ASPH 35mm). In the first image the deep shadows are lighter (more deep grey than ink black), very fine subject detail can not be detected (which the ASPH easily shows) and the overall contrast is lower, where the ASPH has brilliance and deep saturated and clear colors (in the small subject areas that is). The ASPH also suppresses light fringes around the small subject outlines in strong backlighting and sidelighting, where the older lens exhibits strong halo around the subject contours. The second way to show the image degrading by flare is measuring the deep shadows with a densitometer. You will then find that the older lens has actually a higher reading in the deep shadows than the ASPH, which you could interprete (wrongly) that the older lens is better in the area of light transmission. Ghost images are a totally different kind of phenomenon and yes, my new Summicron 35mm has its share of it if I take pictures with the sun or another strong lightsource shining in the lens. This is a fact of life and you can only get rid of it by building custom shades long enough to shield the lens (look at the Hasselblad shades). Hope this helps Erwin Puts