gotium
Established
Gotta love the Sonnar... It's got such a nice "draw" to it.
...I'd pegged you as a planar fan...do you have both?
Gotta love the Sonnar... It's got such a nice "draw" to it.
Your flower pic really bowled me over. I'd been planning on adding a planar to my ZI for people photos, but I think this has changed my mind. I'd probably learn a lot more from the Sonnar, if nothing else. It would be interesting to learn what leads to the particular "character" it produces, although I assume that the design was derived empirically, rather than deliberately.
my post process is very simple.
crop (optional)
adjust levels
unsharp mask
resize
Are you working from in-camera JPEG or TIFF converted from RAW? If the latter, what are you using for your RAW conversion? (Curious, since my R-D1 results seldom show such luscious colors and pop.)
Ari
The other thing in the Sonnar vs Planar debate is that I have seen some focus shift in my M-mount Sonnar (e.g. zone of best focus moves relative to the point that I chose to focus for f:4-5.6) whereas the Planar has none that I can see (very similar characteristics to the Leica 50 Summicron). The Sonnar has more uncorrected spherical aberration when wide open (reads as a "glow" around highlights) and sharpens up when stopped down, whereas the Planar is just sharp -- sharp when open, more DOF when closed. This Sonnar quality may, in fact, be the "point" of this design. They really are very different and as much as I like the Sonnar, I might think twice before making it my only 50.
Notice that my pix above do not require a particular point to be in focus to work. For a portrait on the other hand, you do want to know where exactly your best focus is going to fall. For my Sonnar, f:2.8 is the most reliable wide aperture in terms of placing focus where I want it. Others have had their lenses "tuned" to register most accurately at f:1.5.
Ben Marks
[Edit]: By the way, this focus shift is learn-able -- it shouldn't keep you from buying the lens if it has the look you want. But you do need your brain flipped to the "on" position when you are using it.