E. von Hoegh
Member
Hee hee hee. I remember that thread... 

...
Ian
Thank you.
Just because a lens is coated, does not mean you can get away without a proper lenshood.
Your experience is just what I would expect, comparing a 1950s single coated lens to a new multicoated lens.
I do know this: with BW I find the difference to be not quite as apparent (adjust development, printing, etc) but with chromes I hugely can see a difference. One has a punch and the other looks dull, and when it's all said and done, I could compare the same scene with same conditions and film and clearly tell which one had better glass/coatings in relation to contrast. A side effect of a higher contrast lens is apparent sharpness too. Whether or not it's actually sharper isn't the issue, but the perceived sharpness because of the high contrast lens will definitely stand out.
Ian,
You are defining everything with contrast. Do you put this on to the table with MTF or Phase ? If we give wrong impression to the people , this goes wrong way. Phase contribution to the image is faraway greater , MTF is the one of the two variable at OTF. Real important one is the phase variable. If you use the highest possible MTF graphed , sharp lens , if the phase sucks , your image turn to an alien , like Japanese lenses. You can design a ultra high contrast lens - like my Fuji - but with a coma or vignetting , these are basic aberrations , it goes down.
MIT presented a research to input an image , extract its high frequency details , nonlinear analysis and than put the function work on an other image. This is some explanation.
Your novar must have a problem , Triotar is the real gentleman , never distracts the eye , lots of line detail and tones are legendary.
How we can define a legendary term , I am looking for a optics test lab at china and order few lens to be tested for phase.
Other interest area is to simulate the aberrations one by one and as a combinations derived from these tests on images and learn what is Leica and Zeiss were doing and how .
I think I will send the first lens after Christmas.
Just because a lens is coated, does not mean you can get away without a proper lenshood.
Your experience is just what I would expect, comparing a 1950s single coated lens to a new multicoated lens.
With chromes you cannot control black point.
Push/pull, plus/minus development?
But with transparency film, you only get one go at it. You can make a print as many times as you like until you are happy with it.
Steve.
My apologies for not wading through every answer to see if I'm duplicating anyone.
In my experience, an image with low contrast requires a contrast boost after the scan. And whenever contrast is boosted, flaws and artifacts start to emerge. The most obvious will be increased grain, dust, and scratches. So an image may have great detail, such as a collapsible Summicron that I used to have, but I'd rather have a higher-contrast lens and high contrast film for scanning. That's why I miss Plus-X, which needed very little boost after scanning.
If you're consistently getting results that are too low in contrast then you might consider increasing your development time. With a bit of experimentation you should be able to match the "Plus X" contrast range you like with any film.
Yes but, again, that is really true only for black and white. With colour films, development time is not a variable. Changing development time can lead to colour casts. Not that I ever tried, that's the theory.
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