Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/06/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 07:46 PM 6/13/97 -0700, you wrote: >This may expalin why as Mark pointed out some >lenses have all surfaces EXCEPT the first surface coated. > And I said: I was very tired last night and couldn't sit, write, & think... ...As always, I could be wrong and if so, I am more than willing to learn. ____________________________________________________________ Again it was late and I didn't finish my thoughts. So here goes... Back when front surfaces were not routinely coated, Black & White was the prevailing medium. Levels of flare were dealt with routinely by exposure and development techniques. Many of the old B&W process books give information relating to the elimination of flare via exposure and development. Flare could be easily dealt with, but ghosting and double imaging could not. I believe this hints toward the idea that the front surface only contributed flare while the rest of the surfaces contributed ghosting and double imaging. Flare is not easily tolerated when using color film. A quote from Ansel Adams "General flare is not troublesome with black and white photography but can have serious effects with color photography as the flare takes on the dominant color of the subject and affects the overall quality of the image." I believe that years ago, coating was an expensive technique. Since flare was not troublesome for black & white photography, not coating the front element was acceptable. Test: Point your tripod mounted SLR camera, unfiltered, modern Leica lens, toward the sun. The sun does not have to be in the field of view, but it should be hitting the front (clean) lens surface. Then place any filter in front of your lens while looking through the camera. You should see an overall reduction on contrast on your ground glass screen. This is flare. Notice that without the filter, the flare is reduced. Your Leica lens coating is far superior to the filter coating. A filter is something you use, carefully, to alter a photographic situation. A lens cap is what you use to protect a lens. Per Leitz document #920-083 "Even high quality filters may create problems in certain situations. High contrast, sunrise, sunset, night shots, bright light sources in the frame. These can cause general degradation of the image, loss of contrast, and double image. Remove all filters in these kinds of situations." Those of you that leave filters on your great Leica lenses are asking for trouble unless you are very careful to not allow the sun (or any other bright light source) fall directly on the filter surface. Instead of possibly ruining a great shot, use a lens cap to protect your lens. Let the wonderful, expensive, Leica front element multicoating, be the first to kiss the light rays as they enter your camera to make that great photograph. Carefully evaluate the situation before you place a filter in front of your lens. I personally use filters a lot. I know their limitations and hazards. I know what they can and cannot do. I only use a filter when I feel it's absolutely necessary, having no other recourse. And I still screw-up! Jim