Retro-Grouch
Veteran
Ouch.Every time I see this subject line I hear Blue Cheer.
“Ain’t no cure for the Summicron Blues…”
Ouch.Every time I see this subject line I hear Blue Cheer.
“Ain’t no cure for the Summicron Blues…”
But none of you can explain or demonstrate what you mean by ‘flat on bw film’? It’s just that I don’t see anything that could fit this description.
I enjoyed shooting with the v3 today. Went for a long walk in the city and surroundings. The size/weight felt really balanced. The long focus throw did not bother me. I just eyeballed the distance and pre-focused the lens as I moved the camera to my eye were I adjusted focus more precisely.I've only owned one v3 Summicron; it was permanently mated to my (also first and only) M5. Its longer focusing throw makes it easier to nail fine detail wide-open. It's a good lens; I'm sure you'll be happy with the results.
Thanks for expanding on this. I don't have a wide experience of different lenses, but I do shoot film and always darkroom print keepers to 16x12. I have the v5 Summicron, which I understand to be optically identical to the v4. What puzzles me is that I don't see anything resembling what you describe as 'flat', neither in the scene as a whole, nor specifically around the edges of objects. When I get things right, every detail is as sharp as the proverbial very sharp thing, and even to the naked eye the negatives are noticeably bitey.Because you really need to hold darkroom print from negative taken with particular lens. It is very obvious once you look at it.
Flatterness has nothing to do with age of optical formula, coatings or lack of it.
I had all three versions of Color Skopar 35 2.5 (they say same optical formula). All were flat on darkroom prints.
I got LTM Ultron 35 1.7 and it has this something which doesn't make prints looking flat.
After it I got Summarit-M 35 2.5 and at very first print, despite been just 5x7 it was obvious - one of the best lenses I have tried for bw darkroom prints. Despite distortions 🙂 .
Collapsible Cron was just as good. Rigid - very sharp, but flat on bw darkroom prints. V4 - same. V3 was fine on darkroom prints. Masochists' version of Cosina VM 50 1.5 ASPH was totally awesome on darkroom prints and digital bw.
Even price doesn't matter. I got this overrated Nikkor Fmount 50mm pancake, special version. Dirt cheap lens on darkroom prints. Printed from Helios-81N and it was not flat at all. It was really good.
Flat lens darkroom prints have something missing at the edges of objects.
Usually if someone asks just about lens, I always ask to specify which media. Film (bw or color) or digital.
Because you really need to hold darkroom print from negative taken with particular lens. It is very obvious once you look at it.
Flatterness has nothing to do with age of optical formula, coatings or lack of it.
I had all three versions of Color Skopar 35 2.5 (they say same optical formula). All were flat on darkroom prints.
I got LTM Ultron 35 1.7 and it has this something which doesn't make prints looking flat.
After it I got Summarit-M 35 2.5 and at very first print, despite been just 5x7 it was obvious - one of the best lenses I have tried for bw darkroom prints. Despite distortions 🙂 .
Collapsible Cron was just as good. Rigid - very sharp, but flat on bw darkroom prints. V4 - same. V3 was fine on darkroom prints. Masochists' version of Cosina VM 50 1.5 ASPH was totally awesome on darkroom prints and digital bw.
Even price doesn't matter. I got this overrated Nikkor Fmount 50mm pancake, special version. Dirt cheap lens on darkroom prints. Printed from Helios-81N and it was not flat at all. It was really good.
Flat lens darkroom prints have something missing at the edges of objects.
Usually if someone asks just about lens, I always ask to specify which media. Film (bw or color) or digital.
These discussions about "flat" rendition have their value, but there are a near-infinite number of factors that can lead to that problem (if it is indeed a problem). Some of those factors are baked in, but most are random, intermittent, and almost impossible to trace even with controlled testing. Photography happens in the real world, and it's a messy place. There is no perfect lens or perfect negative, so just go make pictures and embrace a certain degree of imperfection, whether with your Summicron or the nice plastic optics on a Holga.
You are mixing overall contrast which is just a selection of contrast filter under enlarger and how lens renders microcontrast among objects edges.I would suggest that - while lens version and design certainly can affect contrast - you can do an awful lot to mitigate this by how you expose, develop the film, and print. Even with relatively low contrast lenses like legacy Leica optics, I have still gotten very good contrast out of them. Here are examples shot with a collapsible 50mm f/2 Summicron - scans of prints:
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You are mixing overall contrast which is just a selection of contrast filter under enlarger and how lens renders microcontrast among objects edges.
Irrespective of how you print, the negative has a contrast index and local contrast. These can be measured. Printing methods help bring that out, but you can only manipulate what is there unless you use AI.I split VC print everything. There is no "overall contrast"
I did not do any scientific research ofcourse, but I came to this conclusion by studying pictures taken with these lenses. I know that Cartier-Bresson used a collapsible Summicron, he preferred it to the rigid Summicron. I did not know the number of his lens, so I tried one with a number started with "11". It was so bad that I could not believe it, even worse than a Summitar. I tried other collapsible Summicrons too. I often visited fairs where second-hand "photographica" were traded. These are the best places to quickly try out a lens. Every dealer allows this. Remember the number of the lens well. One day I tried a Collapsible Summicron in mint condition with a number started with "13" and when I had developed the film I was astonished, the results were so good. I had years of experience with a very good rigid Summicron. The rigid Summicrons can suffer from fog, but apart from a fogged or scratched one now and then I have never seen a bad one. However, this collapsible was at full aperture better than my rigid. I still have the lens and will not sell it.I also prefer the Summar over the Summitar. More interesting rendering, slightly more compact, plenty sharp, and uses regular A36 filters instead of the weird Summitar-only filters. Of course, it's uncoated, but I actively prefer that these days. And by the time you get to a coated Summitar, you might as well just have a collapsible Summicron - it's a better lens in every way. But:
Do you have a proper reference for this claim, Erik? As far as I know, the formula of the Summicron didn't change during the collapsible run. "Luckily" mine is in the 136xxxx batch, but I've never seen or heard that it was in any way different to the earlier ones (besides the whole radioactive thing, anyway).
From incel to Hunk in 7 short years…Yeah, sorry @Erik van Straten - I'm with @Ororaro here. My guess is you were just looking at knackered and dirty lenses.
I just had my "post-13" collapsible Summicron deep-cleaned by Skyllaney and it made one hell of a difference. A more interesting example would be my Summar, though.
Here's one of a friend of mine back in 2017 when the Summar was absolutely full of built-up haze and crud:
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And here's one of the same man in 2024 after the lens had been cleaned:
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Both shots were taken on Fomapan, both were shot at f/2, and both taken with the same lens (which actually has a fingerprint permanently etched onto the front element).
Even a very slight film of barely-detectable haze can absolutely ruin a lens.