back alley
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get the zm 25 and never look back.
joe
joe
JeffM said:I hope that was useful.
kshapero said:😎 Anybody out there have any experiences with this lens? Any sample shots?
Todd.Hanz said:I like it, don't mind the size, great value!
nice bokeh wide open
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Todd
BTW, Rawshooter has just been acquired by Adobe. And so it goes....Adam-T said:Yup - got an R1 here too 🙂 . I never shoot JPG with it because the smearing of fine detail is way too much even at ISO160 (lowest ISO) but in RAW with Capture One or RAWshooter essentials, the thing walks on water - it`s like shooting a D2X with a very expensive (if rather slow) lens fitted IN RAW ! . Lets face it, it`s not suprising really as they share the same basic sensor (some have even reported that the R1 CMOS is the D2X CMOS Masked off like the 2.6Mp F505V was a masked off DSC-S75 sensor!)
😉
Lonely Driver said:Torpedo Factory in Old Town Alexandria?
The Zeiss Biogon f2.8 28 was an excellent lens, I sold it only because at one point I sold all my rangefinder gear to get a digital camera.
This next part is a digital digression:
That camera happened to be the “Sony DSC R1,” which is, in my humble opinion, the best digital camera on the market for your buck, and it sadly seems to be no longer manufactured. One can talk about noise, or Megapixels or sensor size, but it’s that subjective quality of the image processor that really counts, and the Sony really performs. The DSCR R1 gives the closest to film JPEGS straight out of the camera I’ve ever seen.
I’ve used the Canon 5d with expensive glass, and it takes great photos, but every image I ever shot needed to be tweaked in raw, the exposure, ESPEICALLY the color, even with the custom white balance: I couldn’t stand the flat color and white skin tones that came out of canon dslrs. Any boost in saturation always felt unnatural to me. But with the Sony I got what I really wanted out of a digital camera, the ability to shoot Jpegs, saturated, properly exposed, straight out of the camera and not have to tweak the sharpness, contrast etc of each image to infinity. I basically never use Raw anymore unless the shot is something I’m unsure of how to expose properly.
Anyway, I could go on forever about that camera, but I’ll cut to the chase, the lens on the Sony R1 is a beautiful fixed zoom Zeiss. It’s fast at f2.8 from 24-28mm, but from the 35mm-115mm zoom range, it was a slow f3.5-f4.8. The need for speed is what led me back to rangefinders.
End of Digression
So I had the 28mm Zeiss Biogon F2.8, which I sold, and then I bought the 28mm CV Ultron f1.9 with the expectation that I’d be loosing some quality, possibly sharpness, but
saving some money and gaining some speed. Holy **** was I wrong about quality loss.
Not only is the Ultron sharp wide open, but it really has a three dimensional draw that bests most of the lenses I’ve used, more so than even the Zeiss Biogon.
My reasoning is subjective of course, but I believe it has to do with the creamy quality of the lens, which is apparent in most any photo taken with it. I didn’t think I’d like it at first, but after using the lens a lot, I can say the effect is MUCH more subtle than it looks from photos on the net. The OOF regions of the film are very creamy, but the in focus regions snap to such a point that it adds just an extra pop. The Zeiss by contrast was sharper and more crisp across the entire film plain including OOF regions, at the cost of being, if only slightly, more contrasty of a lens. I’m someone who likes to shoot very saturated color negative film, so any help I can get reducing contrast is a plus.
The Ultron I found, is a lens that is easier to retain shadow detail with, which is probably why it’s being praised on digital bodies, and retaining shadow detail is ultimately a quality I look for in lenses to begin with.
So they are different lenses, contrastiness vs creaminess. I wasn’t crazy about the added F-stop clicks in the Zeiss, but it’s nothing that would prevent me from buying another Zeiss M lens. I also haven’t experienced any paint lose with the Ultron yet, and I have a black one.
The Zeiss Biogon, I definitely tested more rigorously for flare, without a hood, and I simply could NOT get that lens to flare in any situation, including shooting at the sun. I also don’t use a hood on the Ultron, and it is also incredibly flare resistant. The color rendition of the both lenses was exceptional, with something about the Zeiss maybe having a slight edge regarding accuracy and richness in the black, while the Ultron’s draw is perhaps a little flatter, (the perfect draw for saturated color film) but gives just beautiful color results.
So what else is there? Distortion is non-existent on both lenses. Both lenses perform wide open with sharpness. Should I add again that the Ultron performs wide open at f1.9 sharply?🙂 No complaints about size or handling on either lens. I don’t use hoods on my lenses if I can avoid it. The Ultron IS bigger, but on a ZI-M body it still doesn’t make an appearance in frameline area of the viewfinder. 😱 Amazing.
And lastly, for the price, the Ultron is a steal, especially in comparison to a certain 28mm Leica lens that has a similarly wide aperture. 😀
I hope that was useful.