Jarin Blaschke
Member
Hi all:
I already have a contemporary lens (Sironar-S) for my black and white, deep-focus abstract and landscape work. I'm now looking for something less clinical for my color work and monochrome portraits. I like nuanced colors for the former and improved bokeh for the latter. Thus, I'm considering a single-coated Goerz Dagor, probably in 9 1/2" and 14" focal lengths. Reportedly the Dagor can be an inherently contrasty lens, hence a desire for single-coat.
A couple questions:
1. Reduced contrast aside, how do the single-coat versions compare to the later, more famous dotted and rimmed versions in regards to resolution and sharpness? I am still seeking a very sharp lens.
2. What serial numbers should I be looking for, that would indicate a single-coating? What year did single-coat begin, and when did they move to multi-coating?
Thanks!
-Jarin
I already have a contemporary lens (Sironar-S) for my black and white, deep-focus abstract and landscape work. I'm now looking for something less clinical for my color work and monochrome portraits. I like nuanced colors for the former and improved bokeh for the latter. Thus, I'm considering a single-coated Goerz Dagor, probably in 9 1/2" and 14" focal lengths. Reportedly the Dagor can be an inherently contrasty lens, hence a desire for single-coat.
A couple questions:
1. Reduced contrast aside, how do the single-coat versions compare to the later, more famous dotted and rimmed versions in regards to resolution and sharpness? I am still seeking a very sharp lens.
2. What serial numbers should I be looking for, that would indicate a single-coating? What year did single-coat begin, and when did they move to multi-coating?
Thanks!
-Jarin