David.Boettcher
Established
Noobie Question No. 8: When were the lenses of the 10.5cm & 13.5cm Elmars first made?
When interchangeable lenses were introduced for the Leica in 1931, Leitz needed to offer some new lenses.
The 3.5cm and 9cm Elmars were new designs, which were needed to get short focus lenses that would cover the 24x36mm negative.
But lens design at the time was difficult and slow, and as Leitz already had some longer focal length lenses which had been designed for medium format, 6x9cm or 9x12cm, cameras, they simply put these in screw mounts to fit the Leica.
The 10.5cm lens which was used in the "Mountain" Elmar had been supplied to Nagel with an f4.5 maximum aperture. This had to be restricted to f6.3 for the Leica because the performance at wider apertures was considered inadequate. The lens which became the 13.5cm Elmar, and father of all 35mm-camera 135mm lenses, was also supplied to Nagel as a medium format lens.
The books that I have looked at so far simply say that these lenses had been "designed in the 1920s". Does anyone know any more about the history of these lenses before they became Leica lenses?
Regards - David
(As an aside, and with thanks to Erwin Puts, I thought that using a larger format lens on a 35mm camera would naturally provide good performance. But large negatives were not enlarged much, if at all; sometimes they were just contact printed. So although the coverage of the 24x36mm negative by such lenses was more than adequate, because only the middle part of the field was used, the degree of correction of lenses for medium formats was not as high as that required for the Leica. In consequence both the 10.5cm and 13.5cm Elmars had fairly short lives.)
When interchangeable lenses were introduced for the Leica in 1931, Leitz needed to offer some new lenses.
The 3.5cm and 9cm Elmars were new designs, which were needed to get short focus lenses that would cover the 24x36mm negative.
But lens design at the time was difficult and slow, and as Leitz already had some longer focal length lenses which had been designed for medium format, 6x9cm or 9x12cm, cameras, they simply put these in screw mounts to fit the Leica.
The 10.5cm lens which was used in the "Mountain" Elmar had been supplied to Nagel with an f4.5 maximum aperture. This had to be restricted to f6.3 for the Leica because the performance at wider apertures was considered inadequate. The lens which became the 13.5cm Elmar, and father of all 35mm-camera 135mm lenses, was also supplied to Nagel as a medium format lens.
The books that I have looked at so far simply say that these lenses had been "designed in the 1920s". Does anyone know any more about the history of these lenses before they became Leica lenses?
Regards - David
(As an aside, and with thanks to Erwin Puts, I thought that using a larger format lens on a 35mm camera would naturally provide good performance. But large negatives were not enlarged much, if at all; sometimes they were just contact printed. So although the coverage of the 24x36mm negative by such lenses was more than adequate, because only the middle part of the field was used, the degree of correction of lenses for medium formats was not as high as that required for the Leica. In consequence both the 10.5cm and 13.5cm Elmars had fairly short lives.)