Lens names: How the heck do they come up with these things?

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Theo Sulphate

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Meyer-Optik Görlitz made a 135/2.8 Orestor that I've been trying to find in Exakta mount at swap meets. It's a beauty:

http://www.wrotniak.net/photo/exakta/lenses.html

(scroll down to the telephoto lenses)

I have no idea what Orestor means.
 

Alan Johnson

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removed account4

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i have been using a movantica f2
i stopped using it cause all my exposures
kept coming out kind of $h¡††Y ...
 

markjwyatt

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Well, I looked through hundreds of lens names. You can divide them into names hinting via Greek or Latin at their characteristics, referring to the manufacturer or being pure fantasy-names.


My all-time-favourite could have become
the “SCHNELLARBEITER” lens.

I don’t think the name is related to the aperture.

(However there is quite a chance that its name relates to the lens designer E. Arbeit.)

Schnellarbeiter = schnell arbeiter = fast worker (literal German), no? I suspect you know that AgX.

Sonnar= Sonn(-e) + ar
sonne =sun (literal German)
-ar -> personalizes (usually) a verb

so Sonnar = maybe sun catcher or light catcher, light painter :wink:, or something?
 

Arklatexian

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Hi Ole,

yes, "A-" means not (or without) here.
"Planat" comes from "planaein" , greek for to wander, here spherical aberrations are meant.
So Aplanat is a lens without / with reduced spherical aberrations.
Btw, the word "planet" comes from "planaein" , too...

The latin word "planus" means flat. On microscope optics a common suffix like in "Plan-Apochromat".

Best
Jens
I wonder if my idea that some manufacturers, with earlier (and maybe some current) lenses ended the lens name with a reference to what the lens formula was. i.e. -AR. Examples: Zeiss-Tessar, Elmar-E. Leitz Tessar, Ektar-Eastman Kodak Tessar, Xenar- Schneider Tessar. Made sense to me........Regards!
 

AgX

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Schnellarbeiter = schnell arbeiter = fast worker (literal German), no? I suspect you know that AgX.
Yes, indeed.
When I first read that name I thought of a joke designation. But it turned out to be the original name...
Those were the times when lenses where still working for us.
 

JensH

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I wonder if my idea that some manufacturers, with earlier (and maybe some current) lenses ended the lens name with a reference to what the lens formula was. i.e. -AR. Examples: Zeiss-Tessar, Elmar-E. Leitz Tessar, Ektar-Eastman Kodak Tessar, Xenar- Schneider Tessar. Made sense to me........Regards!

Yes, a Tessar is made of four (greek: "tessares") elements (in three groups).
And Xenar/Xenon have "xenos" meaning strange or different in their name.

Best
Jens
 

Sirius Glass

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If we still had the auto search you would see that this has been covered in details with a collection of many references and explanations.
 

dmr

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For a long time I wondered what significance the name Takumar had. They say (the ubiquitous "they") that one member of the founding Asahi family was named Takuma.
 

RalphLambrecht

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Something that has baffled me ever since becoming involved with photography is the thinking behing naming lenses. I've read that Tessar comes from a Greek word which I do not know, but that has something to do with its four element design. Where do the names like Summicron, Summilux, Rodagon, Angulon, Raptar, Componon, Xenon, Claron. Noctilux I think I get, f/1 so it's good at night and the word nocturnal makes me think that Nocti- might be Latin, but where does the -lux come from? Anyways, just curious about all this! Thanks again,

- Justin
summilux sound like a sum of lux or lots of light to me.
 

AgX

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Yes, obviously the Summilux needs a great lot of light, whereas as the Noctilux can cope with the night...
 

dmr

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I've read that Tessar comes from a Greek word which I do not know

For some reason, I always associate Tessar with the given name Tess or Tessa (as in the informal variant of Theresa/Teresa/Terese). I associate Planar with plane, as in flat. Likewise the various Summi/Summa lenses as implying the ultimate, the pinnacle, the best.
 
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