Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/04/03

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Leica Users digest V19 #272
From: Dan Cardish <dcardish@sympatico.ca>
Date: Tue, 03 Apr 2001 14:32:39 -0400

I think it is possible for a high resolution lens to show high contrast as
well as low contrast, but I think that the converse is not true.  In other
words, a high contrast lens will always exhibit high resolution.

dan c.

At 01:16 PM 03-04-01 EDT, LRZeitlin@aol.com wrote:
>
>In a message dated 4/3/01 3:09:26 AM, Erwin writes:
>
><< It is remarkable that the idea that there is a significant trade-off 
>between
> high contrast and low resolution still rides high in Leica lore. As far as I
> know no one who holds his view has ever presented demonstrable evidence or
> corroboratable measurements to prove this point. >>
>
>Then Leica itself believes its old myth. I am holding in my hand a glossy 
>information booklet entitled "Leica Lenses" published by Ernst Leitz GMBH 
>Wetzlar/West Germany in 1969 (ref. no. VII/69/CY/Mi). In a chapter titled 
>"Resolving and Contrast" the authors claim that the concepts of resolving 
>power and contrast are not necessarily linked and offer photographic
evidence 
>that of the two, high contrast is more important for general photography.
>
>The booklet was given to me by a Leica factory rep. in 1970 as an
explanation 
>of why Leica redesigned its lenses to emphasise contrast.
>
>Erwin, this is not mythology. It is Leica's own history. Science is another 
>matter.
>
>Larry Zeitlin
>