To Noctilux or Summilux ASPH

Rangefinder Man

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Hello All
I have a delemour which 50m lens to get. I generally like shotting under low light, so is it really worth the extra weight of a Noctilux f1? I was also wondering about the look of the ober all image on Noctilux (creamy is what some peole call it) compared to a Summilux ASPH would be like. I though about the summicron 50, but wanted a bit more light down the barrel.
Thanks all!
 
You are going to get, I predict, a lot of different answers about this. The lenses are VERY different in terms of the images they make. Noct puts the premium on speed, Asph puts the premium on sharpness. I like the out of focus areas on the Asph better. Asph is small, Noct is large & heavy for a Leica lens. People will tell you that the Noct is less of a general purpose lens. I have not found this to be true -- it functions fine as a general purpose lens. I think that the question really comes down to how badly you need f1. If you really do, for how you make pictures, then the choice is simple. If you don't, I would buy the Asph and a tripod or monopod.

You can't really make a bad choice -- if you hate what you bought you can re-sell it and buy the other.

good luck

Ben Marks
 
What Ben said.

The Nocti is more impressionistic wide open. Some users make very potent images using it like that. The Lux 50 Asph. is the great scientist - in dim light it will preserve contrast and detail that your very eyes failed to register.
 
Different lenses, different focal length, but similar discussion here.

http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?p=466493#post466493

Reputation would say that the Noct is not as sure a general purpose lens, but you should here more from actual users before deciding if that reputation is justly earned.

I did speak to one user, but she is a special case as she only uses it wide open in an artistic way. She was very very happy with her Noct, but as I said, she may be a special case because of the purpose with which she uses it.
 
What you are looking for is the Noctilux. I take it that it is hand held photography that you are going to perform. Then the marginally higher sharpness of a Aph is only theoretical anyway.

The Nochtilux is tremedously flexible. You can use it 'all the time'. From bright 'daylight to candlelight'. It produces excellent pictures under normal circumstances and can do things that no other lense can do.

Here on a ZI.
 

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There are still some traces of vignetting at f1.4 in the one I used, but you should be able to remove it fairly easily. I think the vignetting is part of it's overall charm when shot wide open.
 
I know it's not a 50, but the VC 35/1.2 is a great low light performer and everyday lens. It has the "creamy" look wide open, is lighter and smaller than the Noct. and you could probably get it and a used 50/1.4 asph. for the same price as the Noct. IMHO the Noct has a swirly distracting OOF (bokeh, SOFA, whatever)

just a thought,
Todd
 
The Noctilux can be used as a general purpose lens provided you are prepared to carry the weight. A grip helps with the camera balance. It is at it's best at f1.0 with those "impressionistic" images as Alkis so aptly puts it. If you are simply interested in speed get the Summilux and faster film, but if you love the way the Noctilux draws images wide-open there is only one choice.
 
It depends on your need and not what these lenses can do.



Character/Signature: Noct is more dream-like; while the Asph is more clinical.

F-stops: If you really need the F1, get the Noct. If not, go for the ASPH.

Size: If you don't want a big lens, get the ASPH. If you don't care about bulk, go for the Noct.



But first you gotta ask yourself: "what do I want from this lens?" And then find the lens that suits your style of shooting.
 
aizan said:
the noctilux is gimmicky and calls too much attention to its quirkiness. it gets boring after a while.

what a load of rubbish. that's like saying "all surrealistic art is gimmicky", or "all of the impressionist paintings are gimmicky". a lens is only as successful as the photographer that is in command of it. the noctilux can produce fine images. so can the asph. personally, i prefer the noctilux. and from experience i can say it works fine as a general purpose lens (unless you are utterly week, and that extra 200 or so grams puts you over the edge).
 
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