DaveInAZ
Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2016
- Messages
- 84
- Format
- 35mm
Hi!
I'm not looking to start another "brand x is better than brand y" dog fight. I'm at the point where my research has led me to the conclusion that all of the major brands are good. Maybe not 100% equal, but equal enough that I'm far more likely to be the difference between a great image and a mediocre one than the equipment is. It also seems like I'm never going to be printing anything large enough to see much difference between the various formats.
So, I'm thinking that, assuming there are any commonly acknowledged characteristic "looks" among the different brands, that might be the way to narrow down my selection. The whole point of shooting film is to get a look that can't be replicated by digital, right? But, given the same level of expertise, the same film, the same light, same relative field of view, etc., etc... all user-controllable factors being equal... will a shot taken with, say, a brand x lens generally have a noticeably different look from one taken with a brand y lens. Not specific lenses! I'm talking about brands. That is, is there a "family resemblance" among lenses made by the same manufacturer that is different than the "family resemblance" among lenses of another manufacturer?
For instance, in the 35mm world, Leica is known for super-high resolution and strong micro-contrast, which gives shots taken with their lenses a characteristic look (assuming competence by the photographer), which some people hate and others worship. Nikon lenses generally are sharper than Canon, Zeiss tend to be sharper still, with a distinctive color rendering and bokeh, and so on. A lot of this is lost on those who have only known digital photography, but I assume it must also exist among medium format makers. So, is there a similar body of "common knowledge" regarding MF lenses?
Thanks!
I'm not looking to start another "brand x is better than brand y" dog fight. I'm at the point where my research has led me to the conclusion that all of the major brands are good. Maybe not 100% equal, but equal enough that I'm far more likely to be the difference between a great image and a mediocre one than the equipment is. It also seems like I'm never going to be printing anything large enough to see much difference between the various formats.
So, I'm thinking that, assuming there are any commonly acknowledged characteristic "looks" among the different brands, that might be the way to narrow down my selection. The whole point of shooting film is to get a look that can't be replicated by digital, right? But, given the same level of expertise, the same film, the same light, same relative field of view, etc., etc... all user-controllable factors being equal... will a shot taken with, say, a brand x lens generally have a noticeably different look from one taken with a brand y lens. Not specific lenses! I'm talking about brands. That is, is there a "family resemblance" among lenses made by the same manufacturer that is different than the "family resemblance" among lenses of another manufacturer?
For instance, in the 35mm world, Leica is known for super-high resolution and strong micro-contrast, which gives shots taken with their lenses a characteristic look (assuming competence by the photographer), which some people hate and others worship. Nikon lenses generally are sharper than Canon, Zeiss tend to be sharper still, with a distinctive color rendering and bokeh, and so on. A lot of this is lost on those who have only known digital photography, but I assume it must also exist among medium format makers. So, is there a similar body of "common knowledge" regarding MF lenses?
Thanks!