Range-rover
Veteran
I'm sure it's a beautiful lens but price wise not unless I find a sugar mommy!
Life is unpredictable and at some point, especially in these abnormal times, indulgence is a balm for sanity.
Cal,
So we are going to have a giant party here in NYC, and you will be stuck up in Peekskill...
Joe
I`ve read that Karbe has also designed these lenses so that there is a drop in contrast behind the focus point which enhances the fall off ?
I`m not sure I understand how he has achieved that .
Joe,
I have a report that suggests the two upper quintiles (top 40%) are hoarding cash and that when things open up these will be the people who will be partying.
The bottom 60% of incomes are either just getting by or are suffering loss of income.
Cal
IMHO on my APO 35 Cron-L the OOF and the transition from sharp to soft is mucho wonderful and promotes shooting wide open.
It is no lie that stopping down is only used for adding more DOF.
Cal
Don't see anyone 'round these parts not hurting, irrespective of quintile. I do see people packing up and heading out of NYC for good. Living off savings has left everyone poorer.
Sometimes in life, you do get what you pay for.
And VC follows with thier Apo 28/2 (which I could afford) 😎.
James,
I certainly feel lucky because all around me is suffering. Financially I have not experienced any loss of income or gotten a "hair-cut." In fact I look at my moving out of NYC into northern Westchester (suburbs) as a great opportunity that sped up my retirement.
Perhaps the only hit I took was the hospital where I work froze my pension, killing any reason to work till full retirement age. The result is I will retire in about 9 months at the age of 64.
My gal "Maggie" has been locked down for nearly a year. She suffered from depression, and I understand why.
We live in a capitalistic system and in this system a requirement is an underclass. It does seem like we are approaching another time of "Robber Barons."
Worse than living off savings is living off debt. That is what is happening around the world and is standard government policy.
The future I see will be fraught for many.
Cal
cMy parents spent lives into their 30's in 'classless' socialist societies. To paraphrase Churchill, the only virtue of which was that misery was shared equally. Expect for the political class and their perks of power. I'd take capitalism with its faults any day.
My father was a diplomat and Director in Baghdad University for many years. He had a law degree first, but before 1948 there were slow law needs in Baghdad, so he switched to the Education Ministry. My mother got a BA in Education and Psychology from an American university in Beirut, Lebanon. I was bored and worried about the future, so I left Iraq in 1981 to study at Virginia Tech for a MS and then PhD in Statistics. My 40 year anniversary will be in November.
Very interesting, Cal. We are all survivors in the end.
Thanks.
I remember taking a couple of busses to get to the Iraqi Airways store in downtown Baghdad. A young woman was working at the counter. She told me "I envy you having a trip to USA. You will experience Christmas there".
She could not find an airport in Blacksburg (VA) or even close by. I remember telling her "get me to any city in the USA, and I will figure out how to get to Blacksburg". She got me to NYC and then Richmond (VA). I took Trailways bus from Richmond to Blacksburg. A black young man sat beside me. He explained to me the level of racism that black students were facing ... etc. Welcome to the USA 🙂
Uber sharp, uber corrected is nice, but I’m happy with the less ‘perfect’ 35 mm lenses available from Leica and others. If I were to indulge in one of Leica’s newer lenses, I’d go for the slow and flawed Summaron 28mm f5.6 lens.
Uber sharp, uber corrected is nice, but I’m happy with the less ‘perfect’ 35 mm lenses available from Leica and others. If I were to indulge in one of Leica’s newer lenses, I’d go for the slow and flawed Summaron 28mm f5.6 lens.