In the late 1950s I had a Leitz 50mm f2 Summar lens that was truly horrible. For my Leica 3F I also had a 127mm Wollensak which was a much better lens. I also had a 90mm f4 Elmar that was wonderful. I miss the tiny, sharp Elmar.
The Domiplan was a 2.8 3-element lens that came on the cheapest Prakticas. Quality control was all over the place, but good ones are sought after for their unique rendition, especially on DSLR video. The best have good subject sharpness and attractive astigmatism (or swirly bokeh for the hipsters). Many are just soft and murky.A Domiplan, you can't even see through it to focus, or actually see anythingI have another but these lenses were always poor p performers, I have 2 Tessars and a Pancolor (same Exacta fit) and they are fine.
Ian
A Domiplan, you can't even see through it to focus, or actually see anythingI have another but these lenses were always poor p performers, I have 2 Tessars and a Pancolor (same Exacta fit) and they are fine.
Ian
I don't own any" worst" lenses.
Before I read your post, I also was going to post that I had an Exakta fit 50mm Domiplan that was soft, unsharp and gave generally grungy images! Yet a 30mm Lydith and a 135mm Meritar(?) from the same factory, all inherited from my Dad, were fine. A 50mm Tessar was also good, yet a Pancolor just so-so....I guess it was all down to East German quality control, or lack thereof.
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
I sold all my "worst" lenses.
Sorry Dan. I did a search on Google for Worst Lens but it did not pick up your thread.
Very interesting reading.
My worst lens is Nikon Nikkor-S 1.4/5.8cm. It's not surprise that Nikon ditched that lens design just after 2 years of manufacture. Most likely, one of the shortest living Nikkor products.
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