Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>Question-- if I can only afford two (used) lenses... what should they be?<<< Georgette, A 35mm and a 90mm, no question. A big Leica dealer I was chatting with the other day told me that most of his customers have only two lenses, and they are those two, although some professionals tend to go for the 35/1.4 ASPH. and the 75/1.4. However, you can save some money if you wish by purchasing the lenses carefully. The new 35mm ASPH lenses are very nice but, as our lens guru Erwin Puts points out, the just-discontinued 35mm Summicron is still a very fine lens, and that's what I'd recommend to you. It makes a matchless pairing with the camera--you can learn to set the focusing tab by feel very comfortably, and the compactness is a delight. After I de-accessioned that camera and lens combination a number of years ago, my hands "remembered"--and missed--the feel of that combination for a long time; I even dreamed about how it felt to operate it, although let's not dwell too long on what that says about me. <s> You can buy very nice used 35/2's for under $1K, sometimes well under. As far as the 90 is concerned, the new f/2.8 Elmarit is a very fine lens, which one of my photographer contributors and fellow lens-nuts tells me is "without flaws." But you can buy an older Tele-Elmarit for less, and, if you can stand the loss of speed, a 90mm f/4 Elmar-C or Minolta M-Rokkor (same lens, both built for the CL and CLE compact cameras of a decade and a half ago) are very sharp lenses and shouldn't run you more than $375-475. If you're REALLY pressed for funds, consider a Minolta M-Rokkor 40mm f/2 lens as your wide lens. It brings up the 50mm framelines in the M6, which takes some getting used to, but it is a very fine little lens--one of my personal favorites, as clear as cold water and optically very fine. And a minty sample will cost you no more than $275. The one place I recommend you not skimp is in the camera--the M6 with its meter is the one to have. Accept no substitutes. Good luck! And hey, to Duane Birkey--to each his own! I _loathe_ zooms, and consider them virtual insurance against developing a photographic eye. As for whether it's "nuts" to photograph with a 50mm lens exclusively, I recall sitting in Magnum's New York offices in front of a shelf of Cartier-Bresson's contact-sheet books. They filled up many running feet of shelf space, and virtually all of it was shot with a collapsible 50mm Summicron--I mean you could practically count the exceptions on your fingers. For all I know, you may do well enough with multiple focal lengths, and I'm sure there exist many photographers who are enabled by the freedom of using unlimited focal lengths. Me, I like to learn to see like the lens sees, then pluck pictures out of whatever visual panoply I'm presented with. As to whether I can actually _carry out_ this exercise and restrict myself to a 50mm exclusively remains to be seen; I'm very fond of 35mms and I do like portrait lenses as well. Traditionally, I've used the same pair of lenses I'm recommending to Georgette. But that it can be done--and that it's indisputably _not_ "nuts"--is something I'm sure of. We all see differently, and, really, to each his own. And you might not like my pictures, either! Good thing you don't have to. Happy shooting and good negs, - --Mike