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What makes a great lens great?

rrusso

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Just a short video on what I believe to be waaaay too prevalent in judging a lens:

 
I wish I had the last couple of minutes of my life back,
 
When the sage points at the moon, the fool looks at the finger.
 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept" - Henri Cartier-Bresson

Sometimes images made from a Petzval lens excite me.
 
the thing that makes a great lens is the person using it, not the lens. you can give someone the "best" of anything
and if the person doesn't use it well it isn't the best. a lot of people love silver bullets but they only work on werewolves
 
Math is what makes a lens good.

Speaking of math, here's an equation:
drugs + puppets + boredom - something important to say = that video
 
But catman, Petzval lenses used as their makers intended are very very sharp.

I didn't know that. But the swirly bokeh on Petzvals add in interesting element to a photo.
 
Lenses are like wine. Some people obsess over the quality and who makes it. Some like to collect lenses like wine and are snobs. Most wine and lenses are pretty good and I won't spend a lot of money for for either. I say forget the snobbery about lenses and wine. Bring your lenses and take some photos and share it. Take out whatever wine you have and share that too! What is good is about a wine or a lens is what kind you have. It's the moments you have and create with them that matters. Stay thirsty and keep taking pictures!
 
Lenses are like wine. Some people obsess over the quality and who makes it. Some like to collect lenses like wine and are snobs. Most wine and lenses are pretty good and I won't spend a lot of money for for either. I say forget the snobbery about lenses and wine. Bring your lenses and take some photos and share it. Take out whatever wine you have and share that too! What is good is about a wine or a lens is what kind you have. It's the moments you have and create with them that matters. Stay thirsty and keep taking pictures!
You have never drank a bottle of laFitte rothchild ..just saying...otherwise most swill is the same in my book
 
You have never drank a bottle of laFitte rothchild ..just saying...otherwise most swill is the same in my book

Casting pearls to this swine if that happened. :laugh:
 

Interesting read, I do remember that now, was just drawing a blank for a while there...

I have this vision in my head of the modern Pictorialists marching out en masse, Holgas at the ready...

Math is what makes a lens good.

Speaking of math, here's an equation:
drugs + puppets + boredom - something important to say = that video

Drugs? Eh, I doubt that, unless you're talking the prescription kind...and he might be bored. But the point of the video was that with all the new lenses, including new "versions" of existing ones, there seems to be a trend toward a goal of "absolute sharpness corner to corner wide open", lightning fast af, zero to minimal ca, etc. Well, that's all fine and good, but there are tradeoffs.

You have never drank a bottle of laFitte rothchild ..just saying...otherwise most swill is the same in my book

Honestly, I wouldn't know LaFitte Rothchild from Boone's Farm.

I do enjoy a good single malt, however...

I suppose it's a subjective issue, but I tend to concentrate on the empirical qualities rather than the romantic/emotional ones.

Yes, his camera was surrounded by some pricey Zeiss glass, and maybe that was a poor choice on his part (giving the impression he's a lens-sniffer...I don't think he is), but the message is one I agree with, and I thought he went about it in a lighthearted, humorous way.

Anyway, thanks for the comments so far. Taking the video out of the equation, I'm still curious as to what you all think.
 
I guess this video may have touched some "delicate spots", otherwise many people should reactivate their sense of humour. :wink: Although the video definitely wasn't what I expected to see, once I got the point it was amusing and provocatory.:laugh:
 
I wanted to wring the chicken's neck with it's first squawk
 
I realise it's a tongue-in-cheek question, but I'd offer up two answers:

1. Putting it in front of a great subject.

2. No lens can ever be described as 'great', only, ''great for...".

Combine 1 + 2 and you have a photo which is likely to generate a lot of GAS and way too much online debate.
 

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