Canon LTM Canon 35/1.5: A Tribute

Canon M39 M39 screw mount bodies/lenses
I still haven't gotten by Canon 35/1.8 cleaned from inside.
Great little lenses deserve good care.
 
Once upon a time I had a 35mm F:1.8 Nikkor in LTM mount. I used it for twenty plus years and was never dissatisfied. But I had a 50mm F:1.2 Canon and a 100mm F:2.0 Canon. The Nikkor seemed out of place. I knew there existed an F:1.5 35mm Canon . . .

I put the Nikkor out on "EVIL-BAY" and was positively stunned at the price it finally commanded.

I bought my 35mm F:1.5 Canon and have been happy ever since. I'm the second owner - the original having bought it in 1962.

As for its' rarity? I've never seen another. Hell - aside from the 50mm F:1.2 Canon, I've never seen another of any of my Leica/Canon gear.

Thanks for the thread.

Paul
 
Hi guys, first thank you for this thread. Then, I own a Canon 35mm f/1.5 LTM myself and I really love this lens. In fact it's certainly my favorite one, all mounts.

I've just found a M-Summilux 35mm f/1.4 1rst version (non-asph), so I hope I'll be able to compare them soon. Summi is pretended to be quite soft wide open, but to me it should be better in B&W than the Canon 35mm f/1.5.

After 18 months using it in every day use, I find the Canon not so good in B&W, compared to the 35mm f/2 for example (a real Summicron killer with incredible bokeh WO). But for colours, with slides films, I must say I just L O V E the Canon 35mm f/1.5 LTM. I noticed the same thing with the Canon 50mm f/1.2 LTM : very 'milky' with flare in B&W at wide apertures, I did not like it very much, but with colors...

Dante Stella, who seems to like Canon LTM lenses, wrote :

We accept that a F/1.4 lens is tougher to make than an F/2.

Probably easier with a longer than a shorter lens. There are several brilliant choices, for instance, in an 85 /1.4 lens: Contax Planar, Leica R Summilux, Nikon, Minolta... they are all expensive, have fantastic 'build quality', and deliver wonderful, EQUAL, images. And all must be used wide open to show off their unique image properties: a fine F/2 lens is as-good-or-better at any aperture smaller than F/2.8. And I'll suggest there is less difference between F/1.4 and F/2 performance at 85mm than at 50mm, and less at 50mm than 35mm.



I'm sure he's right, and comparing the 50mm f/1.2 to the 35mm f/1.5 suddenly makes sense, don't you think ?

FYI, Peter Kitchingman talks about 5537 copies of this lens. ;)
 
Very nice images from everyone!

There was a Canon 35mm f/1.4 LTM that never quite made it to production. Does anyone know why Canon went with 1.5 instead of 1.4? Any information would be appreciated.

Cheers,
 
The Canon 35/1.4 was almost certainly a prototype for the 35/1.5. Looks mechanically identical. They probably decided that they couldn't make it sharp enough at 1.4.
 
There was a Canon 35mm f/1.4 LTM that never quite made it to production. Does anyone know why Canon went with 1.5 instead of 1.4? Any information would be appreciated.

Are you sure of this, Benny ? I've never heard about and PK does not mention it.

I have the Canon 1.5 trio: 35-50-85.
Which one do I like the most? Make a guess.

I guess it's the 50mm f/1.5... you alone are responsible of the increase of this lens... ha ha... :D

I would like to have the 50mm f/1.5 but I already have the 50mm f/1.4 : I think it's at least as sharp and it has a wonderful bokeh.

Concerning the 85mm f/1.5 : it has to be a great portrait lens, but I've heard that the f/1.8 version is better. The 100mm f/2 also has a great reputation. Raid, your 85mm f/1.5 looks really nice and it's a good deal at this price.
 
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I am only selling it because I need the cash to buy another lens. The 85 1.5 is a very nice lens. I traded off the Canon 100/2 for a Canon 50/1.5. I sold the Canon 50/1.4. It is a great lens, as you said.
 
No one knows about that lens except some owners. I wondered if someone saved the yahoo Japan auction pictures of probably one of the prototype lenses (35/1.4) sold about 5 years ago.
 
Yeah, I saved pictures of the Canon 35/1.4 prototype, and no, I'm not going to play tag with the DMCA police by posting them here. It was from January 2006.
 
I find that using Fuji Reala 100 with the Canon 35/1.5 has potential for resulting in pastel-like colors that look great.

For B&W I prefer the first version Summicron 35mm 2.0with eight elements.It has a nice balance of "everything".
 
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