ranger9
Well-known
Okay, I got on here hours ago to ask this question and got sidetracked reading Jason Schneider articles, so finally: who owns a Cosina Voigtlander 40/1.4 and what do you think of it, especially in terms of full-aperture performance?
Why I'm asking: I'm thinking that for 2022 I should get a frequent-use lens specifically for my Pixii A1571 (on the well-known principle that if you've got a temperamental French girlfriend, you need to buy her presents.)
I've been pleasantly surprised with the results on the Pixii from my plebeian 7Artisans 35mm f/2, but I'd like something with a wider maximum aperture, and I like the idea of the 40mm focal length (which is a longish "normal" on the Pixii) partly because I'm an introvert and partly because I could also use it on my Bessa R3M film camera, for which 40mm is the widest frameline.
The obvious choice would be the CV 40mm f/1.2 lens, which seems to have a great rep for full-aperture performance. Unfortunately, according to my own dodgily-researched what-fits chart, this lens would sing the Too Fat Polka on the Pixii... it's 43.3mm long and 60.8mm in diameter, which means it would intrude into the rangefinder window even at infinity focus.
So the next-most-obvious choice is the CV 40/1.4, which has no fitment problems because it's 55mm in diameter and only 29.7mm long. But... what concerns me about this lens is the following line from the Head Bartender's website: "With a great bokeh and great look wide open, it sharpens up by f/4."
Well, a "great look" is fine, but what I want is a lens that's usably sharp wide open, not just by f/4. And by "sharp" I mean, for example, crisply-differentiated eyelashes on people's faces at a distance of 1 meter or so on a 26-megapixel digital file.
So, who's got this lens and can tell me whether it's up to this, or whether it's just another lens with mushy "vintage-look" full-aperture performance? I've already got plenty of those...
And if the 40/1.4 gets the raspberry from the collective wisdom of RFF, is the 35mm f/1.4 Nokton II any better? Of this one, the Head Bartender says: "...moody 1970's vintage look, by 5.6 it sharpens up to look like a modern sharp lens..." which doesn't sound like a step forward...
Why I'm asking: I'm thinking that for 2022 I should get a frequent-use lens specifically for my Pixii A1571 (on the well-known principle that if you've got a temperamental French girlfriend, you need to buy her presents.)
I've been pleasantly surprised with the results on the Pixii from my plebeian 7Artisans 35mm f/2, but I'd like something with a wider maximum aperture, and I like the idea of the 40mm focal length (which is a longish "normal" on the Pixii) partly because I'm an introvert and partly because I could also use it on my Bessa R3M film camera, for which 40mm is the widest frameline.
The obvious choice would be the CV 40mm f/1.2 lens, which seems to have a great rep for full-aperture performance. Unfortunately, according to my own dodgily-researched what-fits chart, this lens would sing the Too Fat Polka on the Pixii... it's 43.3mm long and 60.8mm in diameter, which means it would intrude into the rangefinder window even at infinity focus.
So the next-most-obvious choice is the CV 40/1.4, which has no fitment problems because it's 55mm in diameter and only 29.7mm long. But... what concerns me about this lens is the following line from the Head Bartender's website: "With a great bokeh and great look wide open, it sharpens up by f/4."
Well, a "great look" is fine, but what I want is a lens that's usably sharp wide open, not just by f/4. And by "sharp" I mean, for example, crisply-differentiated eyelashes on people's faces at a distance of 1 meter or so on a 26-megapixel digital file.
So, who's got this lens and can tell me whether it's up to this, or whether it's just another lens with mushy "vintage-look" full-aperture performance? I've already got plenty of those...
And if the 40/1.4 gets the raspberry from the collective wisdom of RFF, is the 35mm f/1.4 Nokton II any better? Of this one, the Head Bartender says: "...moody 1970's vintage look, by 5.6 it sharpens up to look like a modern sharp lens..." which doesn't sound like a step forward...