Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Recently somebody asked here whether XYZ brand was a good loupe: One of the answers was that a used 50 mm camera lens bought at swap meet for $10 was a good alternative to a pricey loupe. I almost wrote to say that a used 85 mm projector lens bought for $5 would be a good alternative too. I am glad I did not write that. (I hope you have forgotten I already wrote that once, several months ago.) Yesterday I spotted a Schneider 6x aspheric MC loupe for DM 220 at a shop close by, that' about $ 105. The list price here is DM 419 ($199) but you can usually get them for 320-360 DM ($150-170) So I bought the one for DM 220. This is one of the best investments I ever made in photographic equipment, and it would be true even if the price had been higher. If you have enough money to buy a Leica, you should not hesitate to buy one of the real good loupes. Four element aspheric loupes, whether Leitz, Schneider, Rodenstock and a few other brands are all really good loupes. I only use my loupe for looking at b+w negatives and contact sheets, but I guess my conclusion would be the same if I looked at slides. With the new loupe can I easily determine if there is enough detail to warrant an enlargement from looking at the contact sheet (like facial expressions when the face is just 1 mm (1/24") on the contact), and seeing the whole picture at once makes it much easier to judge its pictorial quality than if you have a loupe that only shows part of the picture at a time. And I can look at negatives/contacs for much longer without feeling the eye strain. I guess there is one drawback: I have to put more effort into making the contact sheets, now that I know how much I can get out of them. On the other hand it should save me some disappointing enlargements. - -- Christer Almqvist D-20255 Hamburg, Germany and/or F-50590 Regnéville-sur-Mer, France