vincentbihler
Member
Indeed, looks very sharp from corner to corner and the optics look to be handling high contrasts scenes quite well!
Here in northern Vermont, we just had a couple of days of storm, and today the sun came out. There is little up here usually to take pictures of this time of year, but I took out the 8-element prototype and shot a series of images of snow on the trees. M10, ISO 200, either f/5.6 or f/8. Only in bit of exposure brightening in PS, one image is cropped slightly.
See what you think.
Ed
L1003780 by woodswoman57, on Flickr
L1003776 by woodswoman57, on Flickr
Karbe did make the point strongly that Leica lenses are meant to be used wide open, that one only needs to stop down for DOF or presumably exposure issues. He implied that this had been Leica's philosophy going back also.
I feel like I'm missing something here. I'll wait for someone to correct me. But, I figured that in the past people just weren't shooting wide open. I suppose they could have used slower films, but in general, I assumed that shooting outside meant that you weren't shooting wide open most of the time. Especially give the max shutter speed of 1/1000.
Are we really to think that these lenses were designed to be shot wide open when most of the time the'd be around f/8?
Thanks!
Brad
One point to consider is that film where slower before , so getting a picture of a shadow area with a fast speed (since we are talking about news and fast action photography) required to use a wide apperture.I feel like I'm missing something here. I'll wait for someone to correct me. But, I figured that in the past people just weren't shooting wide open. I suppose they could have used slower films, but in general, I assumed that shooting outside meant that you weren't shooting wide open most of the time. Especially give the max shutter speed of 1/1000.
Are we really to think that these lenses were designed to be shot wide open when most of the time the'd be around f/8?
Thanks!
Brad
It could be that Leica was focusing on indoor photography for journalists where shooting wide open was a requirement. Try using f8.
I still have the file on my SD card, and having only a short time right now to respond, I looked at it on th M10’s view screen, and zoomed in. This appears much sharper in those tree branches than what I see in the flickr image. Of course this may just be the camera optimizing a jpeg.
Later I will again off-load the file and have another look at it in LR or PS.
Ed
Leica has always been about the..wide open shot..
Nikon...not so..
I found that out back in the day..
Could it be wind in the trees?
I looked at that image with the fuzzy to sharp transition, and a couple of others which I had not uploaded, as raw files. The issue definitely was there in all three of my files that I examined. I don't know what to say about the cause, but I guess I will make the excuse that my lens was a prototype, and not the finished product. I had two prototypes to test, so I do not know whether this was an issue with the other one (which is now elsewhere).
Perhaps someone on the thread in China who has a production lens could try to see if anything like this happens with their example. A mystery.
Ed