Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/04/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted Grant wrote: > Doug Nygren wrote: > > My question concerns the Noctilux. I do a lot of night photography. I > > shoot at F 5.6, use color slide film (Velvia and Kodachrome 64) and get > > good results with a 35 mm 1.4 Summilux and and the 21 mm. > > > > How well will the Noctilux perform at 5.6? Will it better or worse than > > a 50 mm 1.4 summilux?>>>>>>>> > > Hi Doug, > I haven't found it to be worse than my 50 1.4 Summilux, the only problem > I have with saying that is I never check to see whether one is better > than the other at 5.6 , 8 or any other aperture. I have the Noctilux > for a very simple reason, "it's the fastest lens on the block and it > works beautifully for me at f1.0! And that's why I bought it to use > wide open as often as I can and to have it when the light is abominable > and I don't want to use flash. > > As far as using it for night photography or minimum light with slide > film it's gorgeous and at f 1.0 sometimes I shoot hand held and that > makes life real interesting when you're not tied to a tripod all the time. > > > My feeling is that the Noctilux is best when wide open.>>>>>>>> > > Well that's right in relation to the pictures it allows you to take hand > held at f 1.0, but the real truth of what is best aperture is to read > Erwin Put's evaluation of the lens . > > > I have borrowed a Noctilux and have found it difficult to focus. The 35 > > mm and 21 are fairly easy to focus.>>>> > > I don't find it more difficult to focus than any other lens, but what > you do have to learn is, exactly where to focus so the finished slide is > in focus where you wanted it. And due to how it looks because of the > extremely shallow depth of field, it can give the impression that one > didn't focus correctly. It's just a matter of focusing exactly on the > right spot to make use of the shallow depth to make the sharpness work > in the image. > > ted I was going to answer in a similar fashion Ted did, but alas, he said it just about all. Just one thing I like to add. The closer your object to film distance gets to the infinity mark, the less you have to worry about depth of field. In other words: If you can, move a bit further away from the object, if you need more depth of field. Regards, Horst Schmidt