Hasselblad - Holy Trinity or 60-100-180?

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
182,950
Messages
2,535,832
Members
95,692
Latest member
ppawluk
Recent bookmarks
0

etn

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 8, 2015
Messages
1,007
Location
Munich, Germany
Shooter
Medium Format
I got my 60mm CF Distagon today! Complete with original box, user manual, lens pouch and lens shade! Near mint condition i'd say.

At the first try i thought: What? Looks a lot like the 80mm... Then i compared the two and it was, of course, as anticipated: Wider FOV but without the distinct wideangle characteristics.
Looks very promising to me. I bet the shorter focal length will come in handy in the mountains. At least i hope that the selection of two focal lengths works fine, but we will see.
You'll love it. The perfect companion to your new 120 :smile:
 

Steven Lee

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2022
Messages
526
Location
USA
Shooter
Medium Format
So instead of insulting you, I'll congratulate you on your new lens :smile: What is it?

And I have to confess... I did the same as you... a comment above triggered my interest in the 160 CB, I had to order one (with return policy!) to give it a try. So if you get insulted for buying a lens, I think I deserve insults too :D

Matt King expressed his admiration for the 65mm f/3.5 lens for his Mamiya TLR. This system has a huge sentimental value to me because it was my first medium format camera, which I love returning to every once in a while. My most used MF combination is the 60mm Distagon on a Hasselblad, so it just made perfect sense to acquire my favorite focal length for my oldest MF camera, so I gave up and bought it.

Just got home from work and found the package on my porch. Beautiful condition and just as described, thank you Japan.
 

blee1996

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 25, 2008
Messages
259
Location
SF Bay Area, California
Shooter
Multi Format
So far I have been rocking two lens kit: 60mm on the 500C for compact everywhere photos stuff, 150mm on the 553ELX for home studio stuff. I convinced myself not to get a 80mm or 100mm, since I already have Rolleiflex with 80mm Planar for that. After two false starts, this time I started to enjoy the Hasselblad V system.
 

David R Williams

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 6, 2017
Messages
30
Location
Calgary, Alberta
Shooter
Medium Format
I've been following this discussion with interest, as I've built a Hasselblad system over the past few years with an SWC, and 50, 100, 120 and 180 (all CFi's) with a 501CM.

I did try an 80 CFE over the past few weeks (coincidentally with this thread) as a step between the 100 and 50, but after having being conditioned to the bite and crispness of the 100, I came to feel that the 80 really isn't a lens for me in this range of focal lengths.

I'm constantly blown away with the image quality of the Hasselblad lenses, and don't think there's anything other than a great lens among them - we're spoiled for choice on these great optics. It's only a question of one's personal preferences for focal lengths, and small trade-offs between the lenses which are well documented for those making these decisions.
 

etn

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 8, 2015
Messages
1,007
Location
Munich, Germany
Shooter
Medium Format
Just got home from work and found the package on my porch. Beautiful condition and just as described, thank you Japan.
No import duties on orders from Japan? I never dared tried ordering anything from there. All my orders from outside EU were hammered; therefore I never dared ordering anything expensive from Japan. Pity, as they seem to have nice stuff. Japanese-made cameras are usually less expensive than in Europe, whereas Leica and Hasselblad are way above the already excessive EU prices.
 

Steven Lee

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2022
Messages
526
Location
USA
Shooter
Medium Format
@etn This probably depends on the country of your residence. I do not know how this works between Japan and Germany. In the US it depends on the item and, I think, on price. For high-ticket medium format purchases we get an additional invoice from FedEx to pay for import duties. AFAIK it does not apply to 35mm format cameras.
 

David R Williams

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 6, 2017
Messages
30
Location
Calgary, Alberta
Shooter
Medium Format
In Canada, we don’t pay import duties for most photo related imports, but do get charged for Goods and Sales Tax based upon the province of residence of the buyer.

And usually a FedEx, UPS, or CanadaPost brokerage fee as well.
 

Slixtiesix

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 31, 2006
Messages
1,338
Shooter
Medium Format
The free-trade-agreement between Japan and the EU came into effect in 2019, so in theory, there should be no import duties in Germany. I have not tried it yet, but I am tempted!
 

dave olson

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 24, 2019
Messages
46
Location
Nevada
Shooter
Medium Format
I find that all I need is my 50, 80, and 150. The 80 is a very versatile lens. I don't equate it with a 50 in 35mm. Since I try and do most of my Hasselblad shooting handheld, that precludes me from any lenses longer than the 150.
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
44,558
Location
Southern California
Shooter
Multi Format
I find that all I need is my 50, 80, and 150. The 80 is a very versatile lens. I don't equate it with a 50 in 35mm. Since I try and do most of my Hasselblad shooting handheld, that precludes me from any lenses longer than the 150.

I do not take portraits so the 150mm lens is my least used lens. I use the 250mm often. Just use faster film such as ISO 400 and you will have no problem hand holding the 250mm lens. The 500mm lens is different and requires a tripod because the swing weight makes it harder to hold steady even with ISO 400 films plus with the fastest shutter speed of 1/500 second limits the exposure choices when hand held.
 

Philippe-Georges

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 11, 2005
Messages
1,795
Location
Flanders Fields
Shooter
Multi Format
I do not take portraits so the 150mm lens is my least used lens. I use the 250mm often. Just use faster film such as ISO 400 and you will have no problem hand holding the 250mm lens. The 500mm lens is different and requires a tripod because the swing weight makes it harder to hold steady even with ISO 400 films plus with the fastest shutter speed of 1/500 second limits the exposure choices when hand held.

When I read about you considering a 400ASA film as a "fast film", then I am surprised how intensive the light in your region must be!
Over here (North-Western Europe) right now, on a good day t1/125sec and F5.6 with 400ASA and no filter is a lucky day, that's t1/60sec and F4 with 100ASA which is the very least to shoot handheld with a Distagon C 50mm T*.
So if I don't want lug a tripod on a walk, a sous-bois is out of the question then...
 
Last edited:

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
44,558
Location
Southern California
Shooter
Multi Format
When I read about you considering a 400ASA film as a "fast film", then I am surprised how intensive the light in your region must be!
Over here (North-Western Europe) right now, on a good day t1/125sec and F5.6 with 400ASA and no filter is a lucky day, that's t1/60sec and F4 with 100ASA which is the very least to shoot handheld with a Distagon C 50mm T*.
So if I don't want lug a tripod on a walk, a sous-bois is out of the question then...

Yes I use faster shutter speeds and smaller apertures during the day, but also I get to shoot hand held longer when the light is waning.
 

grain elevator

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 31, 2020
Messages
805
Location
Germany
Shooter
Multi Format
When I read about you considering a 400ASA film as a "fast film", then I am surprised how intensive the light in your region must be!
Over here (North-Western Europe) right now, on a good day t1/125sec and F5.6 with 400ASA and no filter is a lucky day, that's t1/60sec and F4 with 100ASA which is the very least to shoot handheld with a Distagon C 50mm T*.
So if I don't want lug a tripod on a walk, a sous-bois is out of the question then...

That's just convention. ISO 400 films are commonly called fast, 100 medium speed, even though today that could be considered slow, especially compared to digital, where some cameras don't even go lower than ISO 200 or so.
 

Philippe-Georges

Subscriber
Joined
Apr 11, 2005
Messages
1,795
Location
Flanders Fields
Shooter
Multi Format
That's just convention. ISO 400 films are commonly called fast, 100 medium speed, even though today that could be considered slow, especially compared to digital, where some cameras don't even go lower than ISO 200 or so.

I know, but I was talking about the (local-) light circumstances rather than technicalities...
But, yes, in photography technique has to adapt to the light..

BTW, I like that quote by J-M Petzval...
 

grain elevator

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 31, 2020
Messages
805
Location
Germany
Shooter
Multi Format
I know, but I was talking about the (local-) light circumstances rather than technicalities...
But, yes, in photography technique has to adapt to the light..

BTW, I like that quote by J-M Petzval...

Thanks, at the chance of again writing something you're already aware of, it's not actually by Petzval, it's Goethe's famous last words which I found funny to misattribute to the guy who first gave photographers more light to work with...
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
44,558
Location
Southern California
Shooter
Multi Format
When I read about you considering a 400ASA film as a "fast film", then I am surprised how intensive the light in your region must be!
Over here (North-Western Europe) right now, on a good day t1/125sec and F5.6 with 400ASA and no filter is a lucky day, that's t1/60sec and F4 with 100ASA which is the very least to shoot handheld with a Distagon C 50mm T*.
So if I don't want lug a tripod on a walk, a sous-bois is out of the question then...

With the fast shutter speeds and small apertures, great depth of field means one does not need to stop down to check what is in focus.
 

Edgy01

Member
Joined
Mar 18, 2023
Messages
14
Location
Santa Barbara
Shooter
Multi Format
My Zeiss lenses are based more upon the glass quality than the focal length!
As a result I have what I consider to be their best.

38mm Biogon on the 903SWC (better then the last formulation in the lead free glass 905SWC.

The 40mm CF IF 3.5
The 40mm CF. 3.5

The 100mm
Lastly, the 250mm f/5.6 CF Superachromat


Dan
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
44,558
Location
Southern California
Shooter
Multi Format
My Zeiss lenses are based more upon the glass quality than the focal length!
As a result I have what I consider to be their best.

38mm Biogon on the 903SWC (better then the last formulation in the lead free glass 905SWC.

The 40mm CF IF 3.5
The 40mm CF. 3.5

The 100mm
Lastly, the 250mm f/5.6 CF Superachromat


Dan

I too have the 903 SWC, but I eschew the 40mm lens. I bought the 30mm C Fisheye and the 500mm C lenses, even though I otherwise stick with the CF lenses, because the quality was high and the price so low that I could not pass them up. All the Hasselblad lenses are high quality glass, see my signature please.
 

Steven Lee

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2022
Messages
526
Location
USA
Shooter
Medium Format
My Zeiss lenses are based more upon the glass quality than the focal length!
As a result I have what I consider to be their best.

Dan, I am glad your choice makes you happy. But realize that it's confusing to Hasselblad newcomers. It is confusing because they're interpreting it based on their past experience with other brands, where indeed some lenses are materially better than others.

But within the Zeiss/Hasselblad universe, the differences between the best and the worst are borderline academic and takes considerable effort to exploit. (coming from a guy who owned nearly the entire lens lineup at some point, and done a fair share of resolution target shooting on a tripod, examining negatives with high powered loupes)

So, as a counterpoint to your statement, for the benefit of those who're thinking about dipping their toes in the Hasselblad system, let me say this:

All Zeiss/Hasselblad lenses are the same.

I would say it's the major advantage of the platform. It's like having the same lens which transforms into different focal lengths. I am not aware of any other system with this benefit. Everyone has duds and gems.
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
44,558
Location
Southern California
Shooter
Multi Format
Dan, I am glad your choice makes you happy. But realize that it's confusing to Hasselblad newcomers. It is confusing because they're interpreting it based on their past experience with other brands, where indeed some lenses are materially better than others.

But within the Zeiss/Hasselblad universe, the differences between the best and the worst are borderline academic and takes considerable effort to exploit. (coming from a guy who owned nearly the entire lens lineup at some point, and done a fair share of resolution target shooting on a tripod, examining negatives with high powered loupes)

So, as a counterpoint to your statement, for the benefit of those who're thinking about dipping their toes in the Hasselblad system, let me say this:

All Zeiss/Hasselblad lenses are the same.

I would say it's the major advantage of the platform. It's like having the same lens which transforms into different focal lengths. I am not aware of any other system with this benefit. Everyone has duds and gems.

How do you figure that @Edgy01 is a newcomer to Hasselblad? Maybe here but not to Hasselblad.
 

Steven Lee

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2022
Messages
526
Location
USA
Shooter
Medium Format
@Sirius Glass He is clearly not a newcomer! My point was that his words could be misinterpreted by newcomers, who will be tricked into believing that Zeiss/Hasselblad platform offers some less-than-stellar lenses. It doesn't. They are all crème de la crème, and the differences between them lie strictly within scientific/academic/engineering realm, not in one's photographs.

(one can discover these differences by mounting Z/H lenses onto a GFX adapter, but they're not visible in realistic scenarios shooting ISO 100-400 films)
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
44,558
Location
Southern California
Shooter
Multi Format
@Sirius Glass He is clearly not a newcomer! My point was that his words could be misinterpreted by newcomers, who will be tricked into believing that Zeiss/Hasselblad platform offers some less-than-stellar lenses. It doesn't. They are all crème de la crème, and the differences between them lie strictly within scientific/academic/engineering realm, not in one's photographs.

(one can discover these differences by mounting Z/H lenses onto a GFX adapter, but they're not visible in realistic scenarios shooting ISO 100-400 films)

OK we violently agree on: They are all crème de la crème, and the differences between them lie strictly within scientific/academic/engineering realm, not in one's photographs.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom