Can somebody give me an example of a..... "70's Consumer Lens".?
Thank You
Can somebody give me an example of a..... "70's Consumer Lens".?
Thank You
Looks like a model 36C (stereo version).What are those cameras she's holding?
They were introduced in 79 in 50mm, 35mm and 100mm and they were called "Nikon Series E". They were never labelled "Nikkor". By December 79 the 28mm and 75-150mm had been introduced.Nikkor E series
One fundamental difference between manual focus and AF lenses...All of the pre-autofocus lenses appear to be more solid than the AF lenses.
Pardon my French but how the living bloody hell does an enlarger have image quality? Until you put a LENS on that enlarger, it's a box with a light bulb in one end and a hole in the other. I'd stack my Beasler 45V-XL with a Schneider Apo lens up against your Leitz wankomat any day for quality of reproduction.Image Quality?? A Leitz 1c or a souped-up Durst Micromat (35mm enlargers) have an image quality all their own that I doubt can be duplicated in larger formats.
sure they can scott
its like anything ...
you have to be drinking
the right kool-aid ...
and sounds like you have drunk the shneider-apo koolaid
---
that said, i used to print portraits using a
"solar" (b+j? ) enlarger and probably some cheap 1930s-40s lens
the images it put out had a specific look to them, something i have never been
able to replicate with cold light heads i currently own.
sometimes it IS the enlarger not the lens ...
I think if you cherry pick from the truly very best, creme de la creme of Nikon's older Ais manual lenses....you get something about as good as a lot of Leica glass, and for a whole lot less money.
I quite fancied the babe with the Pentacon Lenses T-shirt, many thanks for that, Flavio. She is by far the best advertisement I have seen for long telephoto lenses. Was I the only one to note her camera in hand looks suspiciously like an old Nikkormat? One of the very finest cameras ever made, with equally wonderful lenses in those old pre-AI and AIS Nikkors. Condemn me for heresy, tie me to a pillar and stone me with old film canisters if you will, yet I will hold my ground on this argument.
Finally, may I contribute my own question for your judgment, arguments and endless critical asides? Like the OP and many of you, I too own many fine cameras and lenses. Recently some guy at a camera shop told me I should buy a filter. What is a filter?
It's all about the illumination system of the enlarger. The ic is semi-diffuse (having only one condenser) and gives a long tonal scale. I stuck a theatrical spotlight bulb into my Durst M35 Micromat and it gives muscularity a la Michaelangelo and reveals the slightest tones!Pardon my French but how the living bloody hell does an enlarger have image quality? Until you put a LENS on that enlarger, it's a box with a light bulb in one end and a hole in the other. I'd stack my Beasler 45V-XL with a Schneider Apo lens up against your Leitz wankomat any day for quality of reproduction.
John- actually, I've drunk the "EL-Nikkor lenses are more than good enough for any enlargement I'm going to make" Kool-Aid. I was making a rhetorical point.
Yes, you're correct, sometimes it is the enlarger. But it's a deviation from the norm, not a "standard setter" like the Focomats claim to be. Honestly, as long as the enlarger is capable of being aligned and can mount a non-broken, non-fungused, non-misaligned lens, brand names are of minor consequence. I'd love to own a vintage Matthew Brady "Imperial" print that was enlarged using a solar (as opposed to Solar) enlarger, no brand names involved, no modern glass, no anything. Brand name when it comes to enlargers only means something with regards to what accessories are available.
I can see a difference between my Summicron and Jpanese lenses, it's subtle but definitely there.
Ian
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