LTM lenses.Which one?

Red Robin

It Is What It Is
Local time
11:45 PM
Joined
Mar 15, 2010
Messages
724
Location
Wrinkle City, Fla.
I've been reading a lot lately about the different lenses that might fit my canon P as well as my bessa R. There's a good one on the Russian clones, a little on Minolta's screw-mounts, Lots on Nikon, Volkslander has some, and of course the Leica brand is well represented, but I have yet to find a "side by side" test or review. The kind where they tape over the name and really do a consumer test. Is there such a list? I read the odd boast that one is better than another, but is it really? Which one? Is there a "TOP 100" ? Well I'm sure you get my drift. Thanks . Red R.
 
Yes!! My point exactly You can spend a lot on the different brands, but is it really better? As for which one? Say 35mm,45mm,50mm ,85mm,100mm,135mm . Is there a site that compares , impartially, say the 50's in .95, the 1.4, 1.2, 1.8 ,2, 2.8 ? Brand vs brand .Red R.
 
Have a look at forum member Ferider's smugmug account, it holds Raid's (another forum member) tests of different lenses in similar focal lengths. The tests have no written information other than lens and what f stop the lens was set to. The results are up to the viewer to determine. Looking at the full sized originals the differences between some lenses are clearly seen.

http://ferider.smugmug.com/Technical
 
Nikkor 50mm F1.4 and Nikkor 85mm F2 LTM lenses.Classic lenses, with a classic look to your photos, and a lot of history behind them. And still damn good shooters, even to this day.
 
I've gone through the same decision ordeal a couple of years ago. I even had the same two cameras. I still have the Canon. I started with a black Jupiter-8. It's a great lens for the money ($50). My only gripe with it was the sliding aperture ring. Later I bought a Canon 50mm/1.8 ($150) which I still have and use regularly. For a 35mm lens I bought a used Voigtlander 35mm/2.5 Color Skopar ($200), a great performer. I still think I made the right choices then.
 
The point is really about what you want to achieve. Some of the LTM lenses that we rave about here deliver results that many would consider terrible but produce a look or character that others find desirable in the finished photograph.
 
Last edited:
I've gone through the same decision ordeal a couple of years ago. I even had the same two cameras. I still have the Canon. I started with a black Jupiter-8. It's a great lens for the money ($50). My only gripe with it was the sliding aperture ring. Later I bought a Canon 50mm/1.8 ($150) which I still have and use regularly. For a 35mm lens I bought a used Voigtlander 35mm/2.5 Color Skopar ($200), a great performer. I still think I made the right choices then.

+1. I, too, had a Canon P and Bessa R, still have the Canon P, bought and regularly use a Canon 50/1.8, bought and sold a CV Skopar 35/2.5, regretted selling it, and later bought the M-Mount version. I've since purchased a bunch of different LTM lenses, tried 'em out, sold the ones I didn't like and kept the ones I did.

But it's hard to answer your question w/out knowing more about what characteristics you're looking for in a lens. Are you shooting mainly color film, or b&w? Do you want a lens that's contrasty and sharp across the plain of focus wide open? Or do you want a lens that will give you a softer, dreamier look, often seen in photos from the 1930s or '40s? How close a focus do you need? Do you like shallow depth of field shots, or prefer to have everything pretty much in focus? Even among LTM lenses, it's horses for courses. I don't think there's any overall consensus on "the" best, or best value, lens in a particular focal length. If there were, there wouldn't be three quarters of the threads on RFF! 😀

I'm doing much more b&w photography today than I did several years ago, and I find that I generally don't need really fast lenses to photograph the subjects that interest me. So I've found, among LTM lenses, that the CV Skopar lenses represent incredible value for money. YMMV.

You don't need to spend a bundle to get outstanding glass, particularly among LTM threadmount lenses.
 
Red R.,

Best is a relative term and picking the best lens is subjective and often controlled by ones pocket book as much as test results.

I had a Leica 35mm IV 'Cron but found that I liked the pictures from a Nikkor 35/1.8 better. Might be I did not have the right mix of drugs, who knows, but for me it was the right decision.

Each lens paints light in a different way. While at 35mm distortion is not often an issue, I've seen wide variances between lenses of the same focal length even from the same manufacturer, some times even with the same aperture (note they had very different formulas). Lens prices stay pretty stable as long as you to do not go into the stratosphere (in some cases they do there, other times not at all).

CV really hasn't made a bad chunk of glass. They might not always be as good a Leica of ZM glass, but they are always very good. When I came back to carrying rangefinders I started with a 35/1.7, a fine mix of glass that still is very good. You do not see a lot of them for sale, though many were made.

It really comes down to budget, then speed and size. Lots of great options out there. Give us more of what you are looking for so we can help point you in a direction.

B2
 
Back
Top Bottom