Elsewhere, Peter was talking about selling a Skopar and getting an Ultron, so I raised the question of lens speed and its ups and downs. Time to give the issue its own thread, I guess.
I posted: "On the one hand, a fast lens can be stopped down if you don't need the speed immediately, and wouold seem flexible in offering those wide apertures. But they're big and expensive, and the speed doesn't help focusing as it does in an SLR. Only real need is for low-light and if you want short DOF.
"A modest aperture lens may be very compact, light, sharp, and modest cost. Easy to carry... But it cannot crank open to wide apertures in case of need.
"I've been following the slow-lens Skopar/Heliar path but I hear the siren song of the Ultrons and Noktons!"
And Peter replied: "I have pondered upon this question ever since I am bitten by rangefinder photography. I would think a fast lens would be useful for low light or indoor photography and I bought the Ultron for the latter reason. But IMHO a rangefinder would be better served by a wide angle lens with a moderate aperture of f 2.8 as it is easier to focus, sharper and lighter in construction due to lack of heavy lens elements. All these would also means a lower cost. If not for the need to take indoor photography (as I am doing a photo essay on nurses in Singapore) I would be very happy to use modest aperture lenses and if I want to do low light photography I would use a tripod or a very fast film like Delta 3200."
So... if you use a fast lens for those indoor lowlight shots, does the limited DOF become a problem? I'd like to pop the subject out of the background at will, but having only a centimeter or two of DOF can make things difficult too! So maybe the speed isn't all that useful?
Here's an indoor shot of the type I've been concentrating on this past year. A cobbler shop / shoe repair. Quite dim inside... Shot with CLE and Voigtlander 25mm f/4 wide open, maybe 1/30 sec, handheld, with Fuji 1600 at EI 1000. Plenty of grain, but then the film was outdated too. Really shallow DOF wouldn't be so good in this shot, d'you think?
Or am I just trying to justify budget-saving slow lenses? 🙂
I posted: "On the one hand, a fast lens can be stopped down if you don't need the speed immediately, and wouold seem flexible in offering those wide apertures. But they're big and expensive, and the speed doesn't help focusing as it does in an SLR. Only real need is for low-light and if you want short DOF.
"A modest aperture lens may be very compact, light, sharp, and modest cost. Easy to carry... But it cannot crank open to wide apertures in case of need.
"I've been following the slow-lens Skopar/Heliar path but I hear the siren song of the Ultrons and Noktons!"
And Peter replied: "I have pondered upon this question ever since I am bitten by rangefinder photography. I would think a fast lens would be useful for low light or indoor photography and I bought the Ultron for the latter reason. But IMHO a rangefinder would be better served by a wide angle lens with a moderate aperture of f 2.8 as it is easier to focus, sharper and lighter in construction due to lack of heavy lens elements. All these would also means a lower cost. If not for the need to take indoor photography (as I am doing a photo essay on nurses in Singapore) I would be very happy to use modest aperture lenses and if I want to do low light photography I would use a tripod or a very fast film like Delta 3200."
So... if you use a fast lens for those indoor lowlight shots, does the limited DOF become a problem? I'd like to pop the subject out of the background at will, but having only a centimeter or two of DOF can make things difficult too! So maybe the speed isn't all that useful?
Here's an indoor shot of the type I've been concentrating on this past year. A cobbler shop / shoe repair. Quite dim inside... Shot with CLE and Voigtlander 25mm f/4 wide open, maybe 1/30 sec, handheld, with Fuji 1600 at EI 1000. Plenty of grain, but then the film was outdated too. Really shallow DOF wouldn't be so good in this shot, d'you think?
Or am I just trying to justify budget-saving slow lenses? 🙂