Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/11/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> Sharp is one thing. Brittle is another. I've seen some scenics with the > 90 APO ASPH in strong side light which are just awful. I could use a > compact 75/f2 but don't need a "clinical" lens for my M's. Note that > the 50 ASPH is not an APO. I'll keep my fingers crossed since I enjoy > the 75mm perspective a lot. > >> I would fully expect it to be at last as sharp as the awesome 90 APO ASPH >> ACRO regardless. > > William > Show me/us the scenic with the 90 APO ASPH in strong side light which are just awful as I've used the lens intensively and not gotten any other results beyond exquisite. I'd love to see it and have a feeling won't. And I don't buy the anti ASPH mindset. Obviously a lens which was sharp in a crude or brittle way so it produced an unpleasant image would be a poorly designed lens and if the lens designers didn't see this they would not be good lens designers. They'd be bad lens designers. It is my opinion and belief that Leica designed lenses are second to none including Schneider and Zeiss. Rodenstock and Nikon and Canon. That means their lens designers are good lens designers. Not bad lens designers. Not idiots. Calling Leica lens designers "good" lens designers is of course a coarse insult. They are in the tippy top of their field. Out standing in the lens design field in knee socks. Great would be an insult. Supercalafragilisticexpealadocious would be more to the point. We're supposed to think they would be overwhelmed by crude number results in the design of a lens so that pure resolution and contrast numbers would overrule the range of issues which define a quality image? Like they're myopic or have some kind of tunnel vision in their craft and art? I'm sure the lens designers at Leica are dimly aware that there are a range of issues in good lens design and the range of issues which define a quality image They're not opening a clinic so would have no real use for "clinical" results. Here is a clinical 90 ASPH APO shot of mine you've all seen before if you've been on the list for more than 9 months. http://rabinergroup.com/ImagePages/Carrie.html The lab results were very encouraging. She's expected to live. Use a loupe on this 11x14 fiber print and every eyelash is it's own entity screaming out "hey look at me! I'm an eyelash!" The results though are not clinical when viewing the print held in your hands or on the wall. The overall look is not what you get with a Nikon zoom. It is beatific and I'm complementing the glass not my own work. Or the gal. I, by the way don't buy the internet talk about soft lenses for the photographing of people. Women in particular they apply this to. I think that's garbage. (Men by the way are much more vein) Give me a lens which produces the most clear image. If they have "bad" skin then don't do a tight close up. Just like the song: "Far Far away". Pull back a little. Plenty of people I've found are well aware that their face does not look like a wax mannequin or some type of fuzz and don't even mind a sharp tight head shot blown up life-size or bigger. And they are middle aged or older. And not men. Check out the Edward Weston show he caught on soon enough and is the ultimate example fur such a thing. HE was trained and could retouch a neg and fuzz a lens with precision gusto but threw that stuff all away. The 50 ASPH is not an APO because APO is an issue in normal photography for tele not normal lenses or wide lenses. In repro photography if that still exists you'd find it in all the lenses. Process cameras. It's not the "AP0" which gets the criticism of the people who think anything after Leitz was not Leica. It's the "ASPH". Which I don't think they know from a hole in the ground. :) Mark Rabiner Photography Portland Oregon http://rabinergroup.com/