Nobody said lens character is more important than subject matter.
You win. Very nice lens. Makes my color skopar 25mm look huge.MS Optical Super Triplet Perar 4/28 MC. The name is almost bigger than the lens. Definitely one of my favorites for rangefinders. Sorry for the slightly fuzzy photo but you get the idea.
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I have some but I have been working exclusively with a 35 on the MA this year so it will take a bit of digging.Very cool Dan! It looks like that lens hood doubles the size! Any pics taken with it that you'd like to post?
I regularly use a Minolta MD 28mm f2.8 but that is an SLR lens so I doubt they use similar formulations. However, if the performance of my SLR lens is any indication I would have to believe that the LTM version would be worth it.Has anyone used the g-rokkor 28mm? Once in a while I look at it and think I want this but then I lose my nerve.
How about sterile media? Does that count? It’s real. Digital image capture. When the big push was on to move from film to digital in motion pictures vintage lenses to add “character” to the image were all the rage. Digital capture was considered too “sterile” and “clinical” (those are the cinematographer’s words) using modern lenses and the rush was on for the “artifacts” of older lenses. There is even a rental company that specializes in vintage glass- Old School Cameras. They kept bugging me for my FSU anamorphic lenses. Old Lomo, Canon, Kowa and B&L Baltars and Super Baltars that were practically given away 15 years ago are worth a fortune now because of their “look.” The character of a lens is part of a photograph, how much or how little is up to the photographer and the look they are after. I prefer the way many of my older lenses render. That’s part of my process.Well what's the opposite of a sterile lens, something people demonstrate for it's unique character and say things like 'look at the creamy bokeh'? That could be a car salesman, or somebody selling you a sofa, yes, just feel the plushness. If the character of a lens is more important than the things you photograph something has gone horribly wrong.
I regularly use a Minolta MD 28mm f2.8 but that is an SLR lens so I doubt they use similar formulations. However, if the performance of my SLR lens is any indication I would have to believe that the LTM version would be worth it.
This thread is worthless without pictures taken with said lenses.
This thread is worthless without pictures taken with said lenses.
Well if scanned from an R4 print from mini lab with 0000 setting, meaning no adjustment or comparable analog print, I pay little attention to scanned prints that can be adjusted to minimize grain, maximize grain, soften, sharpened, color adjusted with plug ins to match any particular film. You like Kodachrome, there is a plug in for that, well there use to be.
Scanned prints? Why would anyone scans prints...unless you lost the negatives I suppose...
If you want to show what film is really like, well that not true, if you can a scanned negative you can alter a negative. So I guess I'm a guy that needs to test myself.
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