Feasibility of DIY front element scratch removal.

regit said:
I've heard a quote from somewhere, along the line ... "there's perfection in imperfection", and I guess this applies very well to the Summar :) Enjoy the lens as it is and a Happy New Year to you too!!!

And no, I think you got the wrong face. I've never use a Fuji RF... yet...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabi-sabi

Wabi-sabi (in Kanji: 侘寂) represents a comprehensive Japanese world view or aesthetic. It is difficult to explain wabi-sabi in Western terms, but the aesthetic is sometimes described as one of beauty that is imperfect, impermanent, or incomplete. A concept derived from the Buddhist assertion of the first noble truth - Dukkha.

This concept makes some people angry, for reasons I do not understand. This makes me like it even more.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks
 
bmattock said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabi-sabi



This concept makes some people angry, for reasons I do not understand. This makes me like it even more.

Best Regards,

Bill Mattocks


Ah... I came across this term before in a issue of B&W magazine. Can't remember the photographer's name, but his images are most execllent!!! Can't follow his style either as he is using wet-plate camera!!!
 
schmoozit said:
I have an uncoated 50/2 Summar, and though there is a slight haze, the biggest "problem" is the front element surface with many scratches.

Shit, who cares about a few scratches? You should seen my 85/2 and 35/1.8. They look sandblasted.
 
People used to grind their own mirror for astronomical telescopes, using various grades of carborundum grit from coarse to extremely fine. That would be the stuff to polish a lens element.
 
Back
Top Bottom