I know that most close-up lenses are a simple, one-piece, concave, meniscus lens -- of varying "strength" -- and that others have more than one element to control for various optical aberrations.
But I've run into a set of Ketnor close-up lenses that have me confused. They are simple, one-element lenses, but instead of being concave, they are pretty flat -- even though they create the appropriate close-up effect.
Here are two photos comparing the weakest #1 CU lens (on the left) -- first the front, then the rear -- to a Tiffen #1 (on the right). The Tiffen has the obvious concave shape, while the Ketnor does not. They both reflect TWO images of the single light bulb indicating ONE glass element.
The Tiffen shows the light bulb as expected, on both sides, but the Ketnor reflection suggests a nearly flat surface.
Can anyone explain the differences, optically? Is one better than the other???
But I've run into a set of Ketnor close-up lenses that have me confused. They are simple, one-element lenses, but instead of being concave, they are pretty flat -- even though they create the appropriate close-up effect.
Here are two photos comparing the weakest #1 CU lens (on the left) -- first the front, then the rear -- to a Tiffen #1 (on the right). The Tiffen has the obvious concave shape, while the Ketnor does not. They both reflect TWO images of the single light bulb indicating ONE glass element.
The Tiffen shows the light bulb as expected, on both sides, but the Ketnor reflection suggests a nearly flat surface.
Can anyone explain the differences, optically? Is one better than the other???