swoop
Well-known
I was looking for a Canon 1.2 over a year ago, and i thought $300 was too much. I've wanted a Noctilux as well. But I really can't justify dropping the money for such a thing. I would hardly use it.
Or more likely German-built ZM, as Zeiss is interested in 'landmark' lenses. And why only f/0.95? Canon has already done that. I'd back even faster. The fact that d-o-f will be zero and the lens will need to be calibrated to the body will only worry those 10-20% who buy it to use; the rest will buy it because it exists...
Cheers,
R.
CV likes to recreate the legendary lenses of the past, like the famous pre asph 35mm Summilux and do it with their own pinache and style.
The gigantic 50mm f.95 Canon is in the limelight at the moment.
I'm not entirely convinced of that. Yes, there have been some classic recreations or homages, such as the C-Sonnar (which I suspect may have been as much German in inspiration as Japanese -- Dr. Nasse loves classic lenses) but the great majority of CV lenses have no antecedents and are either marked improvements on whatever did go before or (more usually) complete novelties: 12, 15, 25 'snapshot', 28 Ultron, all 35s, most 50s, the 75 and 90...
The 50/0.95 Canon was not really a very good lens, so why would anyone re-create it? I sure as hell wouldn't want one (I've tried a couple belonging to friends), but I might buy a significantly better lens. And there's an enormous collector market for the fastest lens ever -- much bigger than there is for the second rangefinder lens at f/0.95.
Cheers,
R.
This signifies the end of RF photography.
The "King of the Night" is still on the English website: http://en.leica-camera.com/photography/m_system/lenses/2182.html
Looks like Wooly beat me to the punch here. Wild and crazy light-gatherer that it is, the 'lux pretty much went at right angles in terms of the M-cameras' principal strengths in an attempt to go mano y mano with crazy-fast SLR glass over the last few decades. Never mind the RF's intrinsic advantage in low-light shooting (no mirror-slap-and-tickle stuff).As to the comment about RF photography being dead, myself and probably hundreds of thousands like myself could never be bothered to strap something that large to a rangefinder regardless of the results. Seems to defeat the whole purpose of what a rangefinder does for me...
I wouldn't mind a sanely-sized f/1.2 lens myself, but given that Konica was the only outfit to offer one in recent times, and that lens wasn't exactly svelte, I think that f/1.4 is pretty much the practical limit. And why not? The Noctilux was born in an age when ISO/ASA 400 was considered wicked-fast (b/w only, of course), and absolute lens speed meant a bit more than it does now. We've enjoyed massive advances in high-speed film emulsions over the last decade and a half, and alongside this we have sensors in upper-end digital cameras that can cruise at ISO 800 all damn day, and be cranked up to 3200 or so (at least with Nikon's D3), without too much wincing. Also recall that Canon stopped making their hyperspace-class EF 50mm lens a while back. These lenses are great as technical exercises, as well as deep-pockets bragging rights, but even for those occasional edge-of-night photographic forays, why do we kill ourselves over that last fraction of an f/stop?Would be delightful if zeiss could produce a 50 that is maybe 1.2 and much much smaller. That Id gladly pay a small fortune for.
I suspect this lens was discontinued because Leica is about to announce the M9 which has 1 stop better noise performance than the Nikon D3.
I wouldn't mind a sanely-sized f/1.2 lens myself, but given that Konica was the only outfit to offer one in recent times, and that lens wasn't exactly svelte, I think that f/1.4 is pretty much the practical limit.