fotomeow
name under my name
Hey all,
I would like some input from ya'all about which SLR lenses have the most similar characteristics to the version 2 35mm/50mm Summiluxes.
By characteristics, I mean: 1) pretty fast at f1.4 or so) nice tonal range and gradation from highs to lows, 3) attractive bokeh, but not necessarily super soft OOF or swirly, 4) that special "je ne sais qua" that the Lux's have. Im OK with the focus being a little soft wide open, and I even love the glow if used properly.
I love the 35/50 v2 Lux's I have and would like to try FF digital. I would like an M9 as much as anyone else, but simply cant afford it. The dSLRs are more affordable, Nikon, Canon, etc. I guess Im leaning toward Nikon just for compatibility reasons with older film SLRs.
Are there some heritage lenses you can recommend to go on a dSLR? Thanks!
I would like some input from ya'all about which SLR lenses have the most similar characteristics to the version 2 35mm/50mm Summiluxes.
By characteristics, I mean: 1) pretty fast at f1.4 or so) nice tonal range and gradation from highs to lows, 3) attractive bokeh, but not necessarily super soft OOF or swirly, 4) that special "je ne sais qua" that the Lux's have. Im OK with the focus being a little soft wide open, and I even love the glow if used properly.
I love the 35/50 v2 Lux's I have and would like to try FF digital. I would like an M9 as much as anyone else, but simply cant afford it. The dSLRs are more affordable, Nikon, Canon, etc. I guess Im leaning toward Nikon just for compatibility reasons with older film SLRs.
Are there some heritage lenses you can recommend to go on a dSLR? Thanks!
Last edited:
BillBingham2
Registered User
Leica SLR lenses?
Sorry had to do it.
B2 (;->
Sorry had to do it.
B2 (;->
ampguy
Veteran
I've not seen any
I've not seen any
but will be interested to see the responses. One reason may be that Leica has optimized their lux lenses for wide open to about 5.6, while some SLR vendors have put the 1.4 (or 1.7, 1.8, 1.9) and sometimes even the f2, just to be there, but not to perform well there.
I've not seen any
but will be interested to see the responses. One reason may be that Leica has optimized their lux lenses for wide open to about 5.6, while some SLR vendors have put the 1.4 (or 1.7, 1.8, 1.9) and sometimes even the f2, just to be there, but not to perform well there.
Hey all,
I would like some input from ya'all about which SLR lenses have the most similar characteristics to the version 2 35mm/50mm Summiluxes.
By characteristics, I mean: 1) pretty fast at f1.4 or so) nice tonal range and gradation from highs to lows, 3) attractive bokeh, but not necessarily super soft OOF or swirly, 4) that special "je ne sais qua" that the Lux's have. Im OK with the focus being a little soft wide open, and I even love the glow if used properly.
I love the 35/50 v2 Lux's I have and would like to try FF digital. I would like an M9 as much as anyone else, but simply cant afford it. The dSLRs are more affordable, Nikon, Canon, etc. I guess Im leaning toward Nikon just for compatibility reasons with older film SLRs.
Are there some heritage lenses you can recommend to go on a dSLR? Thanks!
Ronald M
Veteran
Sorry. Nikon glass is nice as is Canon if you do not compare it to Leica.
I just mounted a Nikon lens mount to my Leica 35 4.0 and 28 2.8 pc lenses for my D700.
For grins I compared Nikon glass to these and was very disappointed. Nikon AiS files look muddy, low contrast. low color sarutation in comparision with Leica lenses.
Try an old Nikor H 50 2.0 and 35 2.8 single coated and that is as close as you can get.
You should bet both under $200 total.
Not to knock the Nikkors, as I have a few dozen . You will think they are OK until you compare side by side.
I just mounted a Nikon lens mount to my Leica 35 4.0 and 28 2.8 pc lenses for my D700.
For grins I compared Nikon glass to these and was very disappointed. Nikon AiS files look muddy, low contrast. low color sarutation in comparision with Leica lenses.
Try an old Nikor H 50 2.0 and 35 2.8 single coated and that is as close as you can get.
You should bet both under $200 total.
Not to knock the Nikkors, as I have a few dozen . You will think they are OK until you compare side by side.
Rob-F
Likes Leicas
I would suggest the 50/1.4 Nikkor. Sorry, I don't have any ideas for a 35/1.4 substitute. The 28mm AI-s is a great lens, as is the 24/2.8 AIS (or AF). Those two are perhaps not as good as the Leica M, but are as good as the Leica R equivalents. The 28 Af-Nikkor is not in the same league. Not sure if you were interested in anything that wide, though.
fotomeow
name under my name
B2: Leica Rs might be a logical choice, yet they dont go as far back as the M-mount lenses, which seem to be "period" pieces, and that time period seemed to offer certain characteristics which I like and described above. So if there are any R lenses similar to the characteristics above, please let us know.
Ampguy: Thanks, that was an interesting point you made about Leica optimizing their lens' performance toward being wide open rather than stopped down, and thus the qualities the Lux' have to offer.
Ronald: thanks for the comparison. I dont mind low contrast, but am not looking for high contrast or high saturation. I will look into the Nikor H 50 2.0 and 35 2.8 single coated. For under $200, that would be great (on the $3000 dSLR!).
THANKS FOR ALL THE INFO,
Gary
Ampguy: Thanks, that was an interesting point you made about Leica optimizing their lens' performance toward being wide open rather than stopped down, and thus the qualities the Lux' have to offer.
Ronald: thanks for the comparison. I dont mind low contrast, but am not looking for high contrast or high saturation. I will look into the Nikor H 50 2.0 and 35 2.8 single coated. For under $200, that would be great (on the $3000 dSLR!).
THANKS FOR ALL THE INFO,
Gary
loneranger
Well-known
Actually you guys are all missing the one choice out there, Contax 50/1.4 C/Y mount, can be had for about $200, and to my eyes, very similar to the leica summilux, if not better.
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
Actually you guys are all missing the one choice out there, Contax 50/1.4 C/Y mount, can be had for about $200, and to my eyes, very similar to the leica summilux, if not better.
And you can put it on a Nikon with a Leitax adapter, or on a Canon with an EOS-C/Y adapter.
But, to be honest, if you want to spend the $$$ on a full-frame DSLR, you can easily buy five different 50s to try out which one you like best.
jamiewakeham
Long time lurker
50/1.4 SMC Takumar? One hell of a lens. No equivalent in the Pentax or Zeiss M42 range to the 35 Lux, though.
Cheers
Jamie
Cheers
Jamie
besk
Well-known
I have heard that the manual focus 35 f/2 Canon had excellent bokeh. Minolta used to advertise the bokeh of their manual focus lenses. Those are the two places I would search first.
oftheherd
Veteran
Actually you guys are all missing the one choice out there, Contax 50/1.4 C/Y mount, can be had for about $200, and to my eyes, very similar to the leica summilux, if not better.
Sorry, no good. The OP is looking for soft close up and glow. You won't find that on Contax T* 50mm f/1.4 lenses.
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
Sorry, no good. The OP is looking for soft close up and glow. You won't find that on Contax T* 50mm f/1.4 lenses.
He might go the opposite way and look for a Nikkor-S 5.8cm f/1.4 from 1960 or so, then
Get it AI-converted and use it on a D700.
Igor.Burshteyn
Well-known
How about Olympus OM 50mm f2 macro?
fotomeow
name under my name
Actually you guys are all missing the one choice out there, Contax 50/1.4 C/Y mount, can be had for about $200, and to my eyes, very similar to the leica summilux, if not better.
Thanks LoneRanger: Are you referring to a Contax 50/1.4 C/Y mount from days past? the 70s? that may have limited lens coatings, or a post-60s feel in terms of contrast and B/W rendition?
Did Contax/Zeiss have T* lenses back then?
If it is pre-T* then it may have the medium contrast/medium saturation Im looking for.
ferider
Veteran
By an R Summilux and convert to Nikon mount ? You can get kits for the conversion.
ckuang
Established
Hi Gary, good thread you've started. I've actually been in the same boat as you. I love the old Leica look, with the glow and just that touch of old school softness. Now for the bad news. My advice before you splurge a whole lot of money down on a D700 and a bunch of lenses is to go rent the camera and lenses first to try it out. Somewhere like www.lensrental.com Why? IMO, it's not really a question of Nikon lenses vs Leica lenses and the look of it. In your case, I feel like it's going to be a situation of film vs digital.
In my past experience of trying to use old lenses on digital cameras, be it the M8 or the Canon 5D/1Dmkiii, the result was nothing at all like film. I can't give you the technical explanation as I'm not an engineer, but for me, the old school lenses on film looked right. On digital, it just looked like the whole images was out of focus. Is it because digital is so sharp and the tolerance for focus is so low? is it because digital has the tendency to be so high resolution that all the flaws in a lens like CA, fringing, that gave character to film images now come to light as what they truly are in digital? i'm not sure. I know one of the main difference for me between film and digital is the transition from in focus to out of focus is far more abrupt on digital to my eyes. This alone would make a pretty big difference to the ay old school lenses look.
Anyway, my thoughts are to rent it and try before you make the leap. you might be back to film pretty quick.
In my past experience of trying to use old lenses on digital cameras, be it the M8 or the Canon 5D/1Dmkiii, the result was nothing at all like film. I can't give you the technical explanation as I'm not an engineer, but for me, the old school lenses on film looked right. On digital, it just looked like the whole images was out of focus. Is it because digital is so sharp and the tolerance for focus is so low? is it because digital has the tendency to be so high resolution that all the flaws in a lens like CA, fringing, that gave character to film images now come to light as what they truly are in digital? i'm not sure. I know one of the main difference for me between film and digital is the transition from in focus to out of focus is far more abrupt on digital to my eyes. This alone would make a pretty big difference to the ay old school lenses look.
Anyway, my thoughts are to rent it and try before you make the leap. you might be back to film pretty quick.
imush
Well-known
I would vote for Hexanon 35/2 (check out 40/1.8 too).
ashrafazlan
Established
Sigma 50/1.4, pretty amazing glass if you have a properly calibrated one.
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