I came across this unusual lens recently, and had a thread on it asking about the mount (turned out to be a T-mount)
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Here's some shots from it, and they are very weird. It's almost as if it's a meniscus lens or something. It exhibits very little resolving power, and seems to be well suited for portraits for that reason. If you zoom in and look at the people on the beach, there's almost no detail on their bodies. To me, they look like plastic figures on a miniature set. It also has an unusually shallow DOF, even for a 135 2.8. The flower shot is what got my attention though. Very different than any lens I have used, except for the first model Agfa Isola that I once owned, which had a meniscus lens.
This is my usual Arista EDU Ultra 100 souped in Mic-X stock solution. I had so-so results w/ my Chinese takee outee, homemade developing tank on the last roll, and switched to a Publix mushroom tray (8 oz Baby Bella). Much better! I simply thread the film on the reel in the darkroom, set it into the tray filled w/ chemicals, and agitate it at the usual intervals by swirling the reel around in the tank. The reel fits in the tank perfectly, so there's no wasted chemistry.

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Here's some shots from it, and they are very weird. It's almost as if it's a meniscus lens or something. It exhibits very little resolving power, and seems to be well suited for portraits for that reason. If you zoom in and look at the people on the beach, there's almost no detail on their bodies. To me, they look like plastic figures on a miniature set. It also has an unusually shallow DOF, even for a 135 2.8. The flower shot is what got my attention though. Very different than any lens I have used, except for the first model Agfa Isola that I once owned, which had a meniscus lens.
This is my usual Arista EDU Ultra 100 souped in Mic-X stock solution. I had so-so results w/ my Chinese takee outee, homemade developing tank on the last roll, and switched to a Publix mushroom tray (8 oz Baby Bella). Much better! I simply thread the film on the reel in the darkroom, set it into the tray filled w/ chemicals, and agitate it at the usual intervals by swirling the reel around in the tank. The reel fits in the tank perfectly, so there's no wasted chemistry.


