Sunday Morning Lens Quiz #04

Sunday Morning Lens Quiz #04

  • Lens A is the modern lens

    Votes: 10 18.9%
  • Lens B is the modern lens

    Votes: 42 79.2%
  • Looks the same

    Votes: 1 1.9%

  • Total voters
    53
  • Poll closed .

ItsReallyDarren

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We had 28mm before, then 50mm, now 35mm this Sunday!

One modern 35mm lens, one classic 35mm lens.

Details will be revealed when the poll closes in three days.

[Lens A] [Voigtlander Nokton 35/1.4 MC] shot at f2.8
6294217294_40118a2063_b_d.jpg



[Lens B] [Leica Summaron 35/2.8] shot at 2.8
6294217420_508de746e3_b_d.jpg
 
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Hmmm lets see, the background is more out of focus and there's more shadow detail in the photo taken with lens A.

Not that tells me much... :confused:

But I'll guess that the lower contrast of the vintage lens helps to retain more shadow detail, so my vote goes to A as the vintage lens and B as the modern lens.
 
Lens A is the modern lens. The out of focus backgroud in picture B becomes sharper towards the corner. That is typical for old lenses. This phenomenon is called "curvature of field".

Erik.
 
A Classic
B Modern

Re Erik's comment, I thought field curvature was a function of design and lens speed, not period of manufacture. Interesting.
 
I'm guessing A as the classic and B as the modern. Reason is that a lot of modern 35's have focus shift, and if you focused with an RF camera on the tree, then the focus shift is focusing a bit behind the tree in B.

This goes to show, that a proper lens test requires a NEX to factor out focus shift.
 
well..... if we go by the "typical" attributes of older vs modern lenses, being contrast and sharpness, then I would choose A as the vintage and B as the modern. But, Erik V.S. has a rep for knowing his lenses, and he has chosen the opposite.

And Ferider's choice is interesting. If A is the CV/1.4, it would have to be a SC version, no?

I can't think of any modern lenses with lower contrast: Certainly not Leica or Zeiss. Maybe CV? Maybe a Russian copy?
 
I go with A being the modern lens, because it appears to have been shot at a wider aperture than B, yet has less vignetting in the corners.
 
I go with A being the modern lens, because it appears to have been shot at a wider aperture than B, yet has less vignetting in the corners.

It certainly could be. But just to play "devil's advocate", we dont know the camera used, the medium used, or the f value, which could affect vignetting.
 
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3 days does sound a bit too long to keep people waiting. I've asked the moderators if they can shorten the poll time to end on the 1st. I'll reveal the answers tomorrow.


In the mean time, I leave you with Lens A and B at F/8.


[Lens A]
6296389250_fbbabb6ce0_b_d.jpg



[Lens B]
6296389920_af3201e190_b_d.jpg
 
I keep hearing this, wish people would stop saying that, it's a complete oxymoron. Sharp bokeh? What? Cold fire? huh? A blunt edge that is sharp, que?

It's a comparative, and thus not at ali illogical: a blunt razor blade can be sharper than than an axe. ;);)
 
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