If you must ask, you may not understand the answer, yet...
If you must ask, you may not understand the answer, yet...
Dektol Dan said:
I've owned only a couple of CVs, an Ultron and a Skopar. I've handled a number of them and very carefully I have waded through the examples found in Flickr, Photosig and elswhere. Vanity, experience, and my wife all think I am a professional photographer. I think they are good entry level lenses, but my suggestion to the serious photographer is to buy the older marks first as used.
If you need to experiment with another focal length they are a good idea but remember, the may not hold their value. But as all real artists know, often one has to 'pay to work'.
Many CVs are very optimistic in their performance. My Ultron, often presented as the new Summicron IV, is wortheless at 1.7 and 2. It's okay at f4. My old 2.8 Summaron runs circles around it. Ergonomicaly it's not so hot, and it's way too big for a 35mm. CV performance may vary from lens to lens. What do you expect from cast plastic lenses?
The built in lens hoods found on many are half joke and half after thought. They actually get in the way by way of their cost compromise.
I like my 25mm Skopar, but I bought it to try out something wider than the 28mm I normally use. It's stick shift focus makes it something of a toy, but admittedly, I now want a REAL 24-5mm lens. It's served its purpose.
The good CV lenses, viewfinders and other products, those almost matching their Zeiss brothers, are not really that cheap. That being the case, buy Zeiss.
The CV lesson is that there is no free lunch and you get what you pay for.
Hey there,
First, i'd suggest you look at your work, not flickr posts when evaluating gear.
Second, VC lenses are an entry to RF gear, and important contributions too: competition is healthy. Your slight using "entry level" is brash and immature. No disrespect intended, but there are truely two levels of RF lens price structures, as new... Zeiss is lumped into the Leica group... and Leica has no 15 or 40mm "entry".
Third, you get what you purchase, others get what you produce. One could buy every CV Skopar+M adapter for the cost of one Leica lens(excepting the 28/2,8 Elmerit, the least expensive Leica lens, new), and thus have 21,25,28 and 35 FL lenses to use, and evaluate... oh, and you'd get VFs for the 21 and 25 included... "cast plastic"? To what do you refer?
I have no Nikon, FSU, nor Canon RF lenses, but I've all the rest(not ALL of them, but 4+ as represntative sample!). The Contax 21/4,5 (1956) has much more "image" than the CV 21, yet only with my film kit... would I buy the Leica or ZM 21, no: with these two lenses(CV and Contax), I've got it(21) covered.
As to your comment about "buy Zeiss", the CV 28/3,5 is very good, and more versitile between those using film and digital gear than the ZM 28. I will say the ZM 25 and 50/2 are characters you want in the play. Include in this cast the Skopars 21,25, 28 and 35: all have a similar feel to the hand, yet each with a slight difference to the touch(distinguishing them in use). OOF for the Skopars is not as creamy as the 10x expensive Leicas, nor the older glass(with less contrast), but at an average f4 max, these are not "available darkness" lenses.
But I digress: to the original post/poll, to dismiss CV lenses is to dismiss the opportunity to explore a FL well and at little cost. The ZM 21, 25 and 50 are sweet. So too the Leica 24, 35, 50(Noctilux), 75 and 90... yet CV lenses 15, 21, 25, 28, 35, and 75 are very real players on the stage. Please excuse my lack of experience with Nikon and Canon RF lenses: there are sweets there too, I suspect.
Have fun with your toys... and you thought they were something other?
rgds,
Dave