Erik van Straten
Veteran
gelatin silver print (color skopar 50mm f2.5) leica II
Erik.
Erik.

gelatin silver print (color skopar 50mm f2.5) leica m3
Erik.
That's a nice thread. I bought mine 7 years ago for about half the price they are selling it now. Never used it much until I started buying film rangefinders. The most striking trait of this lenses is the nice background blur. It's so pleasing and consistent and allows the scene to have an enviromental context, so to speak, that IMO many other lenses lack. Maybe those others are too much on pinpoint sharpness, so their background is just messed up lines. The best I can explain is that most lenses have blurred backgrounds that seem like an astigmatic vision. I once saw some images from an old english made lens that exhibited something like that, so the expression "structured background blur" stuck on my mind. I think I understand that know.
The Japanese call the background blur "bokeh". The bokeh of the Color Skopar 50mm f2.5 in LTM is very nice indeed.
Erik.
gelatin silver print (color skopar 50mm f2.5) leica lll
The Color Skopar 50mm f2.5 really has no distortion at all, better than the Summicron 50mm rigid (!)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/erik_v...87483/sizes/l/
Unsharpness caused by CLOUDFARE.
Erik.
gelatin silver print (color skopar 50mm f2.5) leica lll
The Color Skopar 50mm f2.5 really has no distortion at all, better than the Summicron 50mm rigid (!)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/erik_v...87483/sizes/l/
Unsharpness caused by CLOUDFARE.
Erik.
My only criticism of this photo is that the tonal scale seems just a little too muted and dull. The geometry and spaces work beautifully; I'd like to see it printed up a small notch with just a little more contrast and a clean white somewhere.
G
The border of the print is pure white (Ilford Multigrade FB Classic glossy). The tonality you see here is of course different from the tonality of the original print. The computer screens too are all different. There is no standard. But, as I see it now on my screen, the mood of the print reflects the Dutch wheather quite well.
Erik.