ghost
Well-known
pfft. i shoot indoors with a 28/2.8 all the time.
Well, there's quite a range of "indoor" light, isn't there? And other considerations with shutter speed, and wanting either limited or extensive DoF. I have been doing a lot of indoor shooting with an f/4 wide-angle lens on medium format, EI 500 film; "office interior" light level gives me around 1/30 - 1/60 wide open. In some restaurants and in nightclubs I'd be in trouble. Indeed I was in trouble even with f/2.0 (Contax G system) at an annual banquet last winter and the photos were unusable; I really needed flash. At an evening wedding reception a year ago, though, the 28 'cron was fine and I was glad to have the speed.ghost said:pfft. i shoot indoors with a 28/2.8 all the time.
saxshooter said:I think it would be HUGE... As far as optics, in the SLR world Nikon produced a 28 1.4 AIS lens but I don't know if it was sharp wide open. Canon produced a 28mm 1.8 but not great reviews wide open. I had one, sold it. I preferred by 35 1.4 ASPH on my M6. Smaller, and sharper. 😉
Dougg said:Well, there's quite a range of "indoor" light, isn't there? And other considerations with shutter speed, and wanting either limited or extensive DoF. I have been doing a lot of indoor shooting with an f/4 wide-angle lens on medium format, EI 500 film; "office interior" light level gives me around 1/30 - 1/60 wide open. In some restaurants and in nightclubs I'd be in trouble. Indeed I was in trouble even with f/2.0 (Contax G system) at an annual banquet last winter and the photos were unusable; I really needed flash. At an evening wedding reception a year ago, though, the 28 'cron was fine and I was glad to have the speed.
A fast lens gives you more flexibility with a tradeoff in size/cost... Nice to have the choices.
Nachkebia said:I have Nikon 28mm f/1.4 (its not ais btw it is AFD) but it is huge! open wide is not that sharp, but it has amazing charecter and it is one of my favorite lenses in my nikon line-up 🙂
Unfortunately, I don't think you're too off the mark here.rxmd said:You are optimistic. I would expect Leica to do this as an in-factory firmware upgrade for $200 with possibly the option to do this for free during the warranty period.
telenous said:The problems is that at f1.4 the plane of focus is so thin that group shots at low light are out too. You 'd probably have to stop down to f2.8 which gets you back to Elmarit territory. But I agree, f1.4 is really about having the option to use it - sometimes it is very handy.
Actually with extreme wideangles it has nothing to do with digital sensors or with the quality of the lens maker. It's a very simple optical rule, called the cos^4 rule, that governs light fall-off and natural vignetting in rectilinear lenses. It states that the relative intensity of a light ray on the film plane is proportional to the fourth power of the cosine of the angle of incidence between the light ray and the optical axis. This is due only to laws of optics and isn't changed by stopping down. Any further fall-off due to oblique angles on digital sensors applies in addition to this.gabrielma said:Voigtlaender wide angle lenses already exhibit falloff on film wide-open.