woodleica
Established
Does anyone have photos to share they think are magical? I am contemplating a purchase, but great images shot with this lens on a digital body are hard to come by.
That's because most are used for bokeh tests using cats as the subject 😉
Its a great lens if you can afford it. If you need the speed, I don't think there is much to be proven by this lens...
A straight google search will give you plenty to chew on.
It is not the speed that sets this lens apart, it is the way it draws. Magic is the right description.
Just a reminder for posters who ask questions like the one that started this thread. Every photographer sees these things differently. I can't think of an aspherical Leica lens that I would consider magical. They may be amazing in their corner-to-corner sharpness, resolving power, etc. But I see that as technical perfection rather than "magic."
For me, it's the Mandler-era lenses - the pre-asph luxes, etc.- that are magical in their rendering.
Then again, I came to the conclusion this weekend that I'm really not a fan of high-def TV. It's just too perfect for my own tastes.
I am a hardcore Mandler-man; the f1 noctilux, the lux 75, the pre-asph lux 35 and 50 all give a look that I value highly. But the asph lux has the ability to be a chameleon, depending on how it is used, and take on a variety of rendered looks. That said, it is less used than my v2 50/1,4 lux.
That's because most are used for bokeh tests using cats as the subject 😉
While the Cron is a fine 50, I really like how the Lux 50 draws. I see the Lux as being half-cron, half-nocti.
I will try to illustrate that it can take on different looks depending on how it is used:>
First, a shot that is very much like a pre-asph lux 50:>
dreaming of a memory by thomasw_, on Flickr
Secondly, a shot that looks like a 'standard' asph lux shot, technically very strong:
Après ballet by thomasw_, on Flickr
So, the ASPH can be a bit of a chameleon depending on how it is employed -- a very versatile lens, almost like your planar + sonnar combined into one lens 😉 FWIW, I *think* the lux asph is a planar design.