I am looking for a lens for my Nikon SLR and can't decide between these lenses:
55mm 2.8 micro
55mm 3.5 micro
60mm 2.8 micro
Voigtlander 58mm 1.4 Noktor
I am looking for a lens that will be rich with character and beauty and that will look great at Infinity as well as close up.
If anyone has any experience with these lenses, I would be most grateful for your thoughts. Of course I'd also welcome any other suggestions for lenses in the 50-60mm range.
I own the Voigtländer and the 60mm f/2.8D Nikkor. The Voigtländer is a very "old school" lens in a lot of ways. It feels wonderful in the hand with great manual focus feel. For an f/1.4 lens, chromatic aberration is reasonably well controlled. At f/1.4, the corners are a bit soft, but by f/2.8, it's at least as sharp as the other options. I have two objections to the lens. The first is that the lens hood is optional and sells for $59 new. The second is the background rendition is less than optimal, exhibiting overly corrected spherical aberrations. Since one of the main reasons to buy an f/1.4 lens is for subject isolation, I found it a bit disappointing. Close up, the field of focus is reasonably flat, but if youwant close up performance go with one of the micro lenses.
I bought the 60mm f/2.8D for a slide duplication project. When that project was complete I stuck it in the camera bag for a visit to my in-laws, only to find myself having to photograph a collection of cut glass for appraisal. Since then, I've also used it for food photography. Manual focus feel is just okay, as is often the case with autofocus lenses. As far as I can tell, though, I've only used it for three shots at distance -- here's one of them at f/4.5:
Both the 55mm Micro-Nikkors and the 60mm f/2.8D have a "rep" of not being as good at distance as close-up. The newer 60mm f/2.8G is supposed to be better in this regard, but since it doesn't have an aperture ring, it's not useful on manual focus film cameras at all, and on some autofocus film cameras is only usable in P and S exposure modes. Like the Voigtländer, the lens hood for the 60mm f/2.8D is optional, but it's half the price.