scarleton
Member
I am looking at getting either the Nikkor 85/1.4D or 85/1.4G for my Nikon F5. While I know the G is a much newer design, I am wondering if the older D, designed in the era of film would actually be a better lens for me. Here is why I ask:
Many, many years ago (early 2000's) I recall reading that long, fast lens designed for film photography where not idea of digital photography because of DOF and the media being used... What I recall was that the lens design for films took into account that the RGB layer in the film was physically at a different distance (plains) from the lens. Because of that, company, especially in the large format world, started coming out with lens for digital sensors where all three colors needed to focus at the same plain.
My questions:
Many, many years ago (early 2000's) I recall reading that long, fast lens designed for film photography where not idea of digital photography because of DOF and the media being used... What I recall was that the lens design for films took into account that the RGB layer in the film was physically at a different distance (plains) from the lens. Because of that, company, especially in the large format world, started coming out with lens for digital sensors where all three colors needed to focus at the same plain.
My questions:
- Is this a true fact that lens designed for film don't work so well on digital and thus lens designed for digital don't work so well on film?
- If this is the case, does anyone know if the Nikkor 85/1.4G is a digital lens design? I assume it is since it came out only a few years ago long after digital became the go to format.