Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/02/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Coincidently I made about 400 exposures today with the 28mm 1.4 Nikkor 99 percent of them out f 1.4 for shoot I did. I'm very excited about going through the images in Bridge and seeing how a selection of 30 of them look as a group. I'm been doing deep focus stuff so this is a switch for me. If its really as you say a 31mm than I was shooting with a 46.5mm with the crop circle factor of 1.5. I had a wide zoom on another body in my bag and resisted the urge to pull it out and use it; even once. I've never made this many exposures in a shoot before I don't think. Shooting at 1.4 was quite an interesting switch. And not shooting so wide. And not zooming. I'll be real interested in using this lens when it becomes a true 31mm lens; Like it doesn't say on the box. I had a big day today. Mark William Rabiner > From: Marty Deveney <freakscene@weirdness.com> > Reply-To: Leica Users Group <lug@leica-users.org> > Date: Fri, 6 Feb 2009 22:28:26 -0500 > To: <lug@leica-users.org> > Subject: [Leica] Monster High-tech 50mm 1.4 from Sigma and everyone else > -distortion > > >> Well I'm afraid I don't agree as they've in effect come out with a line of >> wide angle Noctili. > > I mentioned the ratio, not the absolute size. I agree that those are large > lenses for a compact RF camera, but they are very compact _for what they > are_. > It gets harder to make a lens compact and perform well as speed increases - > harder than the physical aperture size increase dictates. It also gets > very > hard to keep the lens compact when the designs are required to have very > wide > fields of view. The Nikkor 28/1.4, for example, which has a narrower field > than either of the new Leica wides, especially since it is about a 31mm > lens, > weighs 520g, has a 72mm filter ring and is about 85 mm long (I can't find > an > official figure so I measures mine with a tape measure). The Leica M > 24/1.4 > weights about the same but takes a Series VII filter, which is about 49mm > in > diameter, and is 58.5 mm long. If you put the Leica 24/1.4 next to the > Nikkor > 28/1.4 you'll see why I mentioned the size:specification ratio, not simply > the > size. The same applies for the Noctilux and the now defunc! > t Canon EF 50/1 lens, the 35 Summilux asph and the Canon EF 35/1.4 and so > on. > Leica are putting a lot of effort into keeping things compact, while > retaining > performance. > > Marty > > > Gallery: http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/freakscene > > > -- > Be Yourself @ mail.com! > Choose From 200+ Email Addresses > Get a Free Account at www.mail.com > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information