Spleenrippa
Yes, Right There
The names never cease to astound me. Lens talk sounds crazier than listening to a conversation about exotic Italian cars 
I've done a couple quick lens history searches, and it doesn't seem to be a "named after designer" thing, so exactly where do all those Noktons, Skopars, Sonnars, Summitars, Biogons, etc get their crazy names?
Just curious
I've done a couple quick lens history searches, and it doesn't seem to be a "named after designer" thing, so exactly where do all those Noktons, Skopars, Sonnars, Summitars, Biogons, etc get their crazy names?
Just curious
ZeissFan
Veteran
This explains some of the history behind the Zeiss lens names.
Other lens makers, German and Japanese, tended to use similar sounding names, ending their lens names in "-ar," "-or," "-on," etc. Not exactly creative, but they were "borrowing" the lens designs so creativity wasn't exactly their concern.
Other lens makers, German and Japanese, tended to use similar sounding names, ending their lens names in "-ar," "-or," "-on," etc. Not exactly creative, but they were "borrowing" the lens designs so creativity wasn't exactly their concern.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Here's a few:
'Summar', 'Summicron', 'Summilux' same root as 'summit'
'Lux' root = 'light'
'Noct/Nokt" root = 'night'
'Elmax/Elmar' = 'EL (Ernst Leitz) + Max Berek (designer)'
Cheers,
R.
'Summar', 'Summicron', 'Summilux' same root as 'summit'
'Lux' root = 'light'
'Noct/Nokt" root = 'night'
'Elmax/Elmar' = 'EL (Ernst Leitz) + Max Berek (designer)'
Cheers,
R.
xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
"Where Do Lenses Get Their Names?'
from the lens fairy of course
from the lens fairy of course
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Come to think of it, Spleenrippa, where do people on RFF get their names?
Tashi delek,
R.
Tashi delek,
R.
xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
Come to think of it, Spleenrippa, where do people on RFF get their names?
Tashi delek,
R.
I got mine from a Vietnamese neighbour.
Spider67
Well-known
As much as I know it started with the Tessar, lenses built the same way got the "ar" as ending. This does not fit for the Novar.
....Voigtländers choice of naming lenses "Skopar" makes Italians chuckle as "scopare" describes the activity that needs o persons to create a new one....(In contrast o Suzuki's Pajero....)
@Xayraa: ROFL!!!!
My RFF- Name? My real name translated just like Spyderman
....Voigtländers choice of naming lenses "Skopar" makes Italians chuckle as "scopare" describes the activity that needs o persons to create a new one....(In contrast o Suzuki's Pajero....)
@Xayraa: ROFL!!!!
My RFF- Name? My real name translated just like Spyderman
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Spleenrippa
Yes, Right There
Come to think of it, Spleenrippa, where do people on RFF get their names?
Tashi delek,
R.
Haha, touche!
SpleenRippa was created in junior high. I've been using the same handle since the mid-late nineties
Thanks for the explanation using word roots!
Spleenrippa
Yes, Right There
Roger's answer sounded good. The only way to know for sure is to name your lens yourself. You could call one Loretta, another Bubba...
What would a good name for a Jupiter 8 be? My Betta took Igor already
Platon
Member
Leitz/Leica "Hektor" lens serie = Max Bereks dog "Hektor"
Seele
Anachronistic modernist
Roger,
Summar, Summitar, Summicron, Summilux etc all came from the latin "summa", meaning "all that is known", thus "state of the art".
Spider67,
It started with the Protar, before that Zeiss used the descriptive name "Anastigmat" but then registered the trade mark Protar to apply to them, thus started this lens naming business.
There's a certain "spin" in the Zeiss site, however. "Sonnar" was at first a Contessa-Nettel name and was re-used for the Bertele-designed series of lenses for the Contax.
Summar, Summitar, Summicron, Summilux etc all came from the latin "summa", meaning "all that is known", thus "state of the art".
Spider67,
It started with the Protar, before that Zeiss used the descriptive name "Anastigmat" but then registered the trade mark Protar to apply to them, thus started this lens naming business.
There's a certain "spin" in the Zeiss site, however. "Sonnar" was at first a Contessa-Nettel name and was re-used for the Bertele-designed series of lenses for the Contax.
amateriat
We're all light!
Pejoratively speaking, that wasn't a great move...Leitz/Leica "Hektor" lens serie = Max Bereks dog "Hektor"
- Barrett
Platon
Member
OK! Max Bereks cat sounds better! But was'nt the Hektor lenses a little bit of a dog?
hans voralberg
Veteran
I got mine from a Vietnamese neighbour.
What's your name exactly? I'm curious.
xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
What's your name exactly? I'm curious.
She was a Buddhist and it was a statement about something happening at the 33rd chakra said in an excited way.
xay ra a 33
Lauffray
Invisible Cities
I know Sonnar comes from the German Sonne, which means sun 
hans voralberg
Veteran
She was a Buddhist and it was a statement about something happening at the 33rd chakra said in an excited way.
xay ra a 33
Your name have 33 in it? Nice.
Back on topic, I know the Summa origin of Leitz lens, but what about the Cron bit? Lux is light, what's cron?
uhligfd
Well-known
Hijacking this threat:
Where do cars get their names?
Where do stars (in the sky, I mean) get their names?
Newly discovered chemical elements, compounds, plants, fauna, ... elementary particles in physics?
Trivia "information" to the foreground, everyone!
Where do cars get their names?
Where do stars (in the sky, I mean) get their names?
Newly discovered chemical elements, compounds, plants, fauna, ... elementary particles in physics?
Trivia "information" to the foreground, everyone!
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