back alley
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great shot!



a bit scary eh?
must be a deep rooted feeling of loss stemming from my childhood...😉
very nice benny.
i am getting closer to selling the zm and getting the 1.1.
You willing to trade nice rendering of th Sonnar ZM for an ugly one from CV 50/1.1, Joe? Why? CV 50/1.1 is not in the same leauge as your Sonnar, CV 35/1.2 or even CV 50/1.5 IMO. Why would you want to do this? Plus you have that nice CV 40/1.4 too. I really dont see why would you want to get rid of a good lens to get just an average one, just because its f1.1.
If anything - (in case you just want to try that CV 50/1.1), I'd keep all the lenses you have and just buy it and make you mind up later. Cause if you sell Sonnar and later dont like Nokton - you'll be sorry for letting a better lens go.
gotta love that CV 35/1.2.and when aren't we...?
i went out today with both rd1 bodies and with the cv 28/1.9 and cv 35/1.2 attached...in truth i didn't even take the 28 out of the bag because i wanted to play with the new 35.
i started thinking that if i got the 50/1.1, i could easily live with that kit (and bulk up my arms a bit too) 😉.
i now have a slow and small kit and a large and fast kit and it would be a tough decision to make if i could only keep one kit. i mean, some days small is better but i had forgotten how nice a bigger lens feels in the hand. that big focus grip on the 35 is very nice and so fast to grab on to.
freaky niceHey Joe!
I was in the exact same situation when the Voigtlander 50mm f/1.1 just came out. I wanted it to compliment the 28/1.9 and the 35/1.2.
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In the end, I find myself usually picking one fast lens and 2 slower lens amongst the 3 focal lengths. Works quite well too.
Cheers,
is the 1.1 really that ugly?
I'm sure many will beg to differ.
But if you shoot in relative darkness in most part of the year, it's better to have the option to shoot (albeit you have the 35mm f/1.2) than to the keep the slower 50mm in the bag. To me, out of focus rendering of dark backgrounds are usually not an important consideration in the grand scheme of things.
Joe, here are some of mine (some shot on an R-D1/s) for reference.
Cheers,
I'm sure many will beg to differ.
But if you shoot in relative darkness in most part of the year, it's better to have the option to shoot (albeit you have the 35mm f/1.2) than to the keep the slower 50mm in the bag. To me, out of focus rendering of dark backgrounds are usually not an important consideration in the grand scheme of things.
Joe, here are some of mine (some shot on an R-D1/s) for reference.
Cheers,
the 40/1.4 is gone.
is the 1.1 really that ugly?