So I feel like this lens gets reduced to a footnote on the Nikon F's story, as the earlier and lesser of it's two kit lenses. But this is hands down the best lens I own, and I own a number of lauded Canon and Minolta lenses. I compare it favorably to the slightly longer and slightly faster 50's Meyer Primoplan that I briefly owned.
I've always found this to be a razor-sharp lens with a very distinctive warm color response, that gels well with fast color film like Superia. I've heard that it's actually a retrofocal lens like an SLR wide, and that may have something to do with the truly unique look.
My only criticism of this lens is that literally all the controls are backwards from the Canon lenses I learned on, and that is of course subjective and trivial.
I have no experience of the Nikkor-H that replaced it, but when I hear the Nikkor-S mentioned it's always to compare it disfavorably to its successor. Can the Nikkor-H really be that good?
So what do you think? Has this lens been criminally underrated? Can anyone share a comparison of the S and the H?
I've always found this to be a razor-sharp lens with a very distinctive warm color response, that gels well with fast color film like Superia. I've heard that it's actually a retrofocal lens like an SLR wide, and that may have something to do with the truly unique look.
My only criticism of this lens is that literally all the controls are backwards from the Canon lenses I learned on, and that is of course subjective and trivial.
I have no experience of the Nikkor-H that replaced it, but when I hear the Nikkor-S mentioned it's always to compare it disfavorably to its successor. Can the Nikkor-H really be that good?
So what do you think? Has this lens been criminally underrated? Can anyone share a comparison of the S and the H?