Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/09/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]About the 50mm f/1.5 Summarit... Already owning the 50mm Summilux and 50mm DR Summicron, I bought a 50mm f/1.5 Summarit about three years ago and began using it. Why? Because I remembered the wonderful look of a photograph I made in 1956 with one I borrowed from a fellow student, Don Nichols. At wide-open it has a special character. I choose the look I want and use the lens that gives it. Bob Schwalberg once told me that the 35mm f/3.5 Summaron (first version) that I have, used wide-open, gives better sharpness at the corners than at the center. I've never tested it for this feature, but use it with this in mind. The 50mm f/2 Summar I also own gives a wonderful low-contrast relatively high resolution result. Remember the Eisenstadt photos of the 1930s? The one shot above the Atlantic ocean from the top of the Graf Zep? Probably shot with a Summar. Not a bad image. I also have a 50mm f/2 Carl Zeiss Sonnar with the British Leica adapter. This lens produces very high contrast and sharpness. I got it when I want it... So, improvements in optics are not always improvements in optics, I say.... Ed Meyers On Tue, 2 Sep 1997, Patrick G. Sobalvarro wrote: > On the topic of the "Leica glow," I just wanted to say that my various > Leica lenses have really very different looks to their out-of-focus > regions, even when open to the same apertures. My older 28/2.8 Elmarit-R > has what Photo Techniques would call "complex bokeh," and while I like the > look of its out-of-focus regions very much, they are a very distinctive > element of photographs and must be accounted for in composition. They > aren't anything like the very smooth out-of-focus regions that my > screw-mount 50/1.5 Summarit yields. I would say that at f/4 the Summarit > has the most pleasing out-of-focus rendition of any of my lenses, certainly > more so than the sharper 50/2 Summicron-R. > > The half-dozen or so other lenses I use regularly all have quite different > characteristics. I don't have enough experience with Japanese lenses to > know where they would come in on this spectrum except that since I started > paying attention to out-of-focus rendition, I've come to dislike the very > obvious pentagons and hexagons one gets with lenses that have only five or > six diaphragm blades, as is true of most newer Japanese lenses (and some > Leica lenses). But in rendition of out-of-focus regions there's so much > variation among Leica lenses that I'd expect the same to be true with > Japanese lenses. > > >