Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/04/14

[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]

Subject: [Leica] M Lenses on GF-1
From: dennis at hale-pohaku.com (Dennis)
Date: Wed, 14 Apr 2010 01:11:05 -1000
References: <DC4B73A4105FCE4FAE0CEF799BF84B36052E9B23@case-email.casefoods.com> <p0623090bc7ea6938e704@[192.168.1.5]>

Interesting. Are you attaching the bellows II directly to the 4/3 adapter?

Henning Wulff wrote:
> I've also been quite pleased with the use of M lenses on the GF-1 and 
> G1. The lens I tend to use mostly is the 50/1.4 ASPH; it balances well 
> and complements the 20/1.7 nicely. Occasionally I've used the 75/1.4 
> and 75/2 and even the 135's, but the 135/2.8 starts to look stooopid 
> on the GF-1, and since I have the 45-200 with IS, that is usually the 
> better choice.
>
> What I do use quite a bit is the Leica Bellows II with various lenses, 
> including the 65 and the lensheads of the 135/4 Tele-Elmar as well as 
> more specialized macro lenses. These work quite well, and the bellows 
> unit is fairly compact and good handling for what it is.
>
> With respect to the wider lenses, the smearing in the corners with M 
> focal lengths shorter than 35mm bothers me enough that I generally 
> don't use them. The CV 12, 15 and 21 all suffer from this a fair bit. 
> Also, I have the truly outstanding 7-14 so the wide angle options 
> aren't generally that appealing. It'll be interesting to see how the 
> new 9-18 Olympus collapsible lens performs as it will be a fair bit 
> less expensive than the Panasonic wide zoom and also a lot smaller 
> when collapsed.
>
>
>
> At 1:55 PM -0400 4/13/10, David Rodgers wrote:
>> My initial impressions of using M lenses on a GF-1 are more favorable
>> than I anticipated. The camera feels really nice in my hands with Leica
>> lenses attached. It might even feel better in some ways than it does
>> with the Panasonic 20/1.7. However, I still really like the 20 and all
>> it brings to the table.
>>
>> The Leica lenses are heavier and make the camera feel more substantial.
>> I thought the Noctilux might overpower the camera body (feel like
>> holding only a big lens) but it feels surprisingly well balanced.
>>
>> The fact that the 50/2.8 Elmar doesn't collapse when attached to the
>> adapter makes it a little less compact. That eliminates one of 50/2.8's
>> bigger virtues.
>>
>> My favorite lens on the GF-1 might actually be the 50/1.4 Summilux. It
>> feels and handles very nicely on the body. Same for the 35/1.4 Summilux
>> ASPH. I feel comfortable holding my left hand under the lens. That's the
>> style I grew up with. It helps me to stabilize the camera. A lot of
>> smallish lenses (the 20/1.7 included) are almost too small. The heavier
>> Leica lenses offer a little more ballast, as well as more real estate
>> for getting a solid grip. It makes the GF-1 feel even more like a CL.
>>
>> On the normal to wide end, the 21/2.8 ASPH is too close to the 20/1.7 in
>> focal length and it doesn't have AF. For all those reasons I doubt I'll
>> be using it all that much. I know that contradict whats I said about the
>> "feel" aspect of larger lenses, but as I said, there are other things
>> that I really like the 20/1.7.
>>
>> The 28 Elmarit (3rd Gen) feels much like the 50/1.4 and 35/1.4 (i.e.
>> balances and handles well). However, the 28/3.5 VC Color Skopar could
>> turn out to be my favorite in that focal length. The 28/3.5 is my only
>> chrome lens. I like how it looks on the GF-1 body. Plus it's compact and
>> easy to focus quickly.
>>
>> All the Leica lenses are relatively easy to focus. That was once concern
>> I had before I tried using them. I've said it before, but I really like
>> the EVF. It's convenient to zoom in for critical focus by merely pushing
>> the thumbwheel. It's nice for framing. The "zoom to focus" worked well,
>> particularly when using the Noctilux. People have expressed concerns
>> about the GF-1 EVF but I'm a big fan of it.
>>
>> My one big complaint about the GF-1 and Leica lenses is the fact that
>> the small sensor doubles the effective focal length of every lens. I
>> don't mind that I have a 100mm f1 and 100mm 1.4 lens. And the 35/1.4
>> ASPH is a nice 70/1.4 lens. They all make for nice medium tele's. I can
>> see how the in-body IS of the Olympus Micro Four Thirds cameras might be
>> advantageous with those. .
>>
>> I feel limited on the wide end. I have an 18 VC, but like the 21 Elmarit
>> it's close to the 20/1.7. I may get a 12mm VC, or I may wait until
>> Panasonic or Oly come out with a super-wide for micro four thirds. I'm
>> in more of a normal lens than wide-angle lens phase of late, so I'm not
>> in a hurry.
>>
>> Finally, I'll say that it's really nice be able to use my Leica M lenses
>> on a digital body. The good news I that it seems more practical to do so
>> than I thought it would be. IOW, I'm breathing a sigh of relief.
>>
>> Dave R
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Leica Users Group.
>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
>


In reply to: Message from drodgers at casefarms.com (David Rodgers) ([Leica] M Lenses on GF-1)
Message from henningw at archiphoto.com (Henning Wulff) ([Leica] M Lenses on GF-1)