Markok765
Member
My mistakericksplace said:I agree, Lee.
I have a 75mm/4.5 Ektar that is a five element design and every bit as sharp as my six element 80mm/5.6 Componon.
My mistakericksplace said:I agree, Lee.
I have a 75mm/4.5 Ektar that is a five element design and every bit as sharp as my six element 80mm/5.6 Componon.
Nick Zentena said:All I know is the US rep for Rodenstock jumped on me for saying all the top of the line MF lenses are 80mm. He was talking about the N not the D model of the lens. But this was a few years back.
Dave Miller said:I must gently disagree with Roger over the question of d
However, in many ways your question is irrelevant since you should be trying to satisfy yourself and not the gallery visitors. I rather get the impression that you want us to provide the excuse for you to embark on the purchase of MF goodies, but that must come from within.
df cardwell said:A 12 x 16 image from Delta 400 or 100 ( or Kodak T Max films )
is well within the reach of a competent photographer. It isn't THAT hard, and lots of folks can do it.
Can you tell the difference between prints made in MF and 35, side by side ? Well, sure. Does that make the 35mm image inferior ? Of course not. Does that make MF superior ? No.
Here's the unspoken reality: you can make superb images from 35 in conditions that are impossible to make ANY image from MF.
When and where you make pictures is the real question.
Sunny days on a tripod, MF.
Handheld at twilight, 35mm.
In between, that's up to you.
Thanks for reminding me that it's all a compromise and MF is as much a compromise as 35mm.
Cheers
Jeff
ricksplace said:I thought for a minute I was going insane. I answered this thread already today, and it doesn't show up. The same thread appears on 35mm forum and medium format forum too. I answered the thread on 35mm forum.
1. size matters. always.
2. When in doubt, see point #1.
Rick
Lee L said:Marko,
It doesn't help people (or your credibility) for you to give out misinformation. I have two 75mm f:4.5 enlarging lenses, one made in Japan for Omega (Omicron-EL), and another from Isco in Germany. This wasn't too uncommon a focal length for 6x6 enlargers at one time.
Lee
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