I am amazed at the prices of vintage lenses these days. So I have to ask ..
Are the people buying these lenses users or collectors?
I am amazed at the prices of vintage lenses these days. So I have to ask ..
Are the people buying these lenses users or collectors?
Jeff Kubach said:Most of my stuff is becoming vintage, not just lenses!
Jeff
As you might consider a particular filter for a certain look , I can also add to the mix a specific lens flavor, or personality if you will. Some very distinctive visual differences can be had. To answer the question, I have 6, I NEED more.I guess I should have qualified my question a little better.
I mean if you buy a soft focus lens to use, how many do you need? Theres only so many uses for these.
I guess I should have qualified my question a little better.
I am mainly looking at the +- 1900's vintage brass large format lenses.
I think a Dallmeyer 3b just sold for $1600 on ebay.
Perhaps that was a rare lens but petzvals and similar lenses seem to gain a premium.
I know that swirly bokeh type prints are increasing in popularity but at the prices these go for I cant help but think that people are snatching them up for collections.
I mean if you buy a soft focus lens to use, how many do you need? Theres only so many uses for these.
I just bought an antique lens, so I'll offer some thoughts. I'm not a collector. I just like finely made old things, and especially like the mystery of using something very old. Last summer I started using a c.1959 Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. I liked it! I then bought a c.1937 Voigtlander Bessa, nearly mint condition. I still shoot about one 120 roll per week. I then bought a c.1914 Kodak Special No. 1 and had it fully restored. I will use it when it gets warmer outside (synthetic shutter could shatter in the below zero cold here now.) SO, last week I bought something even older, a c. 1870s Derogy 5.5" Petzval lens. I love its beautiful brass. I love the flowing engraved scripts. I love the sense of grace it gives my Shen Hao 4x5 field camera! I am not a collector, but really appreciate finely made cameras. More than that, I am entranced by the connection they give me to photographers of the distant past. The Derogy has no shutter of course, but I shoot at night a lot anyway. For the record, I have virtually NO interest in what I call the "second wave" of lens technology, that which came after about 1885. I have no interest in buying a lens from 1900. A 1930 Voigtlander Bergheil in dark green, maybe. I paid $650 for the Derogy from a collector. He seems to buy & sell all the time. I had bid on an 1842 Ross Petzval in December, but dropped off at $1,600. I really wish I had taken it to $2,000. For me, the history and connection to the past are very important. I might yet sell the Derogy for something significantly older, but until then I really am in love with it!
New NIkon lenses are costing over $2,000 now. To me it seems that $650 for something so historic, so beautiful, is almost obscenely low. The lens would have cost a small fortune in 1872! For me, the lens not only can make art: it is itself art!
Kent in SD
I too blame collectors. If you look on Ebay, you will frequently see lenses for sale without the mounting ring. A user would want to but the lens complete with the mounting ring, so they can use it. Many collectors don't see the significance of attaching the lens to anything. Recognising this generalisation, take that information, look on Ebay and you can soon pick up who the collectors are.
I guess I should have qualified my question a little better.
I am mainly looking at the +- 1900's vintage brass large format lenses.
I think a Dallmeyer 3b just sold for $1600 on ebay.
Perhaps that was a rare lens but petzvals and similar lenses seem to gain a premium.
I know that swirly bokeh type prints are increasing in popularity but at the prices these go for I cant help but think that people are snatching them up for collections.
I mean if you buy a soft focus lens to use, how many do you need? Theres only so many uses for these.
<snip>
collectors by mint stuff for the most part. so the 3b that sold for 3000$ that did not even have the flange or waterhouse stops was probably NOT bought by a collector
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