I have a Zeiss T* Distagon 25mm 2.8 lens for my Contax 139 35mm camera. Is it similar to the lens you are talking about?
Hi guys,
I was looking up something on the Zeiss M 25mm 2.8 on wikipedia.
It says "Zeiss made a milestone in resolution with this lens. 400 Lines per Millimeter."
What does this actually mean?
-Rob
Actually nothing. At least not in practical life.
, Zeiss actually have the audacity to claim they captured 400 lp/mm on film! Here you go. Apparently achieved with some kind of copy film processed in an unusual manner...
That someone has forgotten waht it means to make pictures.What does this actually mean?
T, yet our practical limit should be near 40 lp/mm.
Ciao!
Gordon Moat
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Y'know, Gordon, I usually shoot at effective apertures of f/11 and smaller. At effective f/11, its possible that the film, given that my technique is meticulous, limits the negative's enlargeability. Possible at effetive f/16 too. But from effective f/22 down, diffraction kills all lenses equally and sets the limits.<snip>
With Zeiss, and the high capability of their lenses, even they point out that the reason to even state this is to point out that their lenses will not be the greatest limiting factor in your photography when you want high resolution. Unfortunately, many on internet forums and in publications jumped all over part of the Zeiss statement, without understanding the context and implication (my opinion). It would not be surprising if other lenses showed a great capability too (from other companies), yet our practical limit should be near 40 lp/mm.
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The big idea that leaps out of the Modern Photography article I mentioned earlier in this thread is that small format shooters are usually pretty casual about focusing perfectly and are absolutely sloppy about motion control.
Shooting handheld is a recipe for low resolution. Most of us trade off resolution in the plane of best focus, wherever it might be, for depth of field. And many of us shoot low resolution emulsions and so can't get the best our lenses can give. And, as LF shooters like you never fail to remind the world, what matters is resolution in the final print, not resolution on film.
All of which are reasons to pay more attention to technique and to the desired result than to lens tests.
Cheers,
Dan
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