dslater
Member
I recently got a Voigtländer Bessa II with a Color-Skopar lens on it. What wonderful camera!!. I took it to a parade out the other day with some Fuji NPC 160 film and my son to try it out. Shot the whole roll - most of the shots of the parade were at around f/11 and are very sharp with great color. However, there is a portrait I took of my son with the lens nearly wide open - probably f/4 or maybe f/5.6 - The out of focus background has wonderfully creamy bokeh and my son pops right out very sharply - I'm looking at a 5x7 print I made right now and this lens/format combination definitely gives my Nikon 85mm f/1.4 AF-D lens a run for its money.
I also have a Bessa 1 with a Skopar lens on it, However, I rarely used it due to the need for scale focusing - the range-finder on the Bessa II makes all the difference.
Just curious, how much better is the Color-Heliar lens than the Color-Skopar - Color-Heliar equipped Bessa's seem to command quite a premium over Color-Skopar ones - is this due to a big difference in quality, or is more due to rarity and collectors driving up the price of Color-Heliar Bessas?
I also have a Bessa 1 with a Skopar lens on it, However, I rarely used it due to the need for scale focusing - the range-finder on the Bessa II makes all the difference.
Just curious, how much better is the Color-Heliar lens than the Color-Skopar - Color-Heliar equipped Bessa's seem to command quite a premium over Color-Skopar ones - is this due to a big difference in quality, or is more due to rarity and collectors driving up the price of Color-Heliar Bessas?