I also like the short teles best. Unfortunately (or should I say fortunately?) The choice in the SL66-system is not as wide as it is with Hasselblad. I like my 120/5,6 best and am searching for an 150/4 at the time. The 120/2 would be nice to have but I have never seen one in real life. Not even sure if it made its way out of the brochures at all. My suggestion would be to keep all the CFi lenses and sell the CFs and CBs to fund something new :-D
As I see you do not have an 250/5,6 already? No wide-angles? Maybe the 50/4 FLE would fit you? Or buy an 203Fe and some fancy stuff like 110/2 or 150/2,8.
By the way, how was the 160 against the 150?
Greetz, Benjamin
Here is the deal - I think I have a normal/short tele fetish or need lens anonymous or something.
In the normal to short tele department I have:
- 80 mm 2.8 Planar CF
- 80 mm 2.8 Planar CFe
- 80 mm 2.8 Planar CB
- 100mm 3.5 Planar CFi
- 120mm 4 Makro Planar CF
- 120mm 4 Makro Planar CFi
- 150mm 4 Sonnar CFi
- 160mm 4.8 Tele Tessar CB
- 180mm 4 Sonnar CFi
In reality I use the 80 CFi and 150 CFi 80% of the time and the others don't even make it into the case the other 20% I through the 120 CFi in there as well. The other two 80s, the 100, the 160, and 180 virtually never see the light of day - they are all like new and nothing wrong with them. I am thinking I should get rid of them to reduce mental clutter but just cannot seem to.
Anyone else got this normal/short tele fetish issue? Honestly I bought the 100 on a whim and all of the other CFi lenses because I like the ergonomics better and the 160 just to see what it was like vs the 150 CFi.
Suggestions? Know of any groups that help with this sort of affliction?
RB
RB,
You do have a problem. Let me help you by removing some of your surplus that I do not have and could use:
- 100mm 3.5 Planar CFi
- 120mm 4 Makro Planar CF
- 160mm 4.8 Tele Tessar CB
- 180mm 4 Sonnar CFi
I will PM my shipping address to you and pay for the shipping. In exchange I will promptly send to you all the 120 Kodachrome film that I have.
your new friend,
Steve
The cure is to acquire a wooden 8x10" or 11x14" studio camera with very large lensboards and a Packard shutter, and then you can begin exploring classic portrait lenses.
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