Larry Cloetta
Veteran
So, dinner at your place, Larry? 😀
Spent all the food and gas money on lenses and IXMOOs. Refrigerator and freezer full of film. Plus, no place left to sit. Sorry. Priorities.
So, dinner at your place, Larry? 😀
Well Cal, it is and it isn’t. 🙂 But when free, it is... 😉
I owned one in the 70’s. The big advantage of this lens was the lack of flare wide open. You know how you get a ball of fuzz flaring light around a streetlight at night? The f1.2 hardly flares under that kind of light. The V3 Summicron which was made at that time also was almost as good at flare control wide open. Both were a major improvement over the V2 rigid and dual range at flare control at f2.
Of course f1.2 potentially could be an advantage under low light vs an f2 just to get an image on film. There was a big disadvantage to this lens besides cost, size and weight. The lens was just average from f4 down. It performed its best from 1.2-4 and at its best it wasn’t exceptional other than flare co troll. Don’t get me wrong, it produced nice images but wasn’t any better or as good as a Summicron resolution wise from f2-4.
I never owned a v1 or 2 Summikux but felt after buying the 1.2 that the summikux would have been as good or better choice. In reality the No til us carried a very high price for 1/3 stop greater speed. Yes 1/3 stop, the progression of f stops is f 1, 1.1, 1.2 & 1.4. One third stop.
Unless you’re just looking for bragging rights, spend the money on something else. In the end, I owned it for a couple or three years and traded it to Doc McGinnis in Nashville. One of the items I acquired in the trade was a v3 Summicron. No regrets.
John,
Call me child like or immature, but I like daydreams and still have that sense of wonder.
One year I figure I bought $10K worth of paper and ink to get serious about digital printing.
Pretty easy to see me spending another $10K on film and printing supplies for wet printing.
Half joking when I said that $20K is not a lot of money. "Crazy is good," I say.
I will also say that I still love my MM, and all my other retro junk.
Cal
No doubt we spend a lot on this stuff...and we will anyway, even if we don't win a raffle. It is expensive to do right and as an artist.
The original MM is certainly a unique camera and THAT "is good."
Good grief... it was just a silly little thread.
Hmmm...I'd likely get an M10-something, a couple of lenses that have long been on the list, then a decent computer/printer/monitor suite to replace my current underachieving/overwhelmed set-up.