Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/01/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Mark, I agree, it's perfectly ridiculous that 0.3 of a metre would make a difference. However, after a year of shooting, it did. I loved the results but I always found myself having to back up from my intended framing. I started out with SLRs back in the day and my first M was an M2 with a 50 Summicron that focused to 0.7m. I never had any close focus issues so 0.7 m must have been my working zone with the SLR 50 mm as well. Even with 35s I seldom "bump" into the 0.7 meter limit. So, after a year of shooting, I did what I felt was best and changed the lens rather than my shooting style. I next tried the 50 Summilux Asph, had issues and finally ended up with a late non-asph Summilux which focuses to 0.7 m. When the new Noctilux came out, the first thing I checked was the close focus limit and, dang, still 1 m. I now use a 75 Summilux -- thanks Henning for letting me try yours -- and am delighted as it focuses to 0.7 m and has an even narrower depth of field than the Noctilux. John On 2012-01-22, at 6:27 PM, Mark Rabiner wrote: > That John sold his Noctilux becuae it went to 1 meter instead of .7 of a > meter is a what I've been hearing on the lug now for a decade with a bit of > wonder. One could carry a Summicron in ones pocket for such critical close > situations could one not? > 11.8 inches is the difference. But the real issue would be the difference > in size of minimum magnification. The smallest area you can shoot would be > and why this could not be settled with a tiny bit of cropping when printing > or Photoshopping the digital image. > The 50mm collapsible and rigid Summicrons in the 50's and 60's both > focused > to one meter. Not the key issue I don't think. > Many people when they are in a 2 to 3 foot shooting space mind set reach > for > their SLR DSLR with maybe a macro lens on it. Put one of those in the > bottom > of your camera bag and you're covered when you need to get close and don't > want to crop.