Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/05/07

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Subject: RE: [Leica] Re: Wow, dig that crazy 90/AA!
From: "Austin Franklin" <darkroom@ix.netcom.com>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2003 22:22:37 -0400

Jerry,

Why would I rebut that?  I only rebut things that are wrong ;-)

And, the issue of depth of field vs depth of focus, Jim and I have discussed
at some length, and we both see eye to eye on this issue.

Austin

> Jim
>
> I'll buy that!  Sounds reasonable to me.
>
> Now I'm waiting for Austin to rebut that! :-)
>
> Jerry
>
> Jim Brick wrote:
>
> > All 90mm lenses, basically, produce the identical depth of field. If one
> > 90mm lens has more contrast and higher resolution numbers, and
> the ability
> > of recording fine detail better than the others, it will
> "appear" to have
> > LESS DOF than the other lenses. This is because of the visual sharpness
> > difference between the sharp and unsharp areas. There is an
> abrupt change
> > between the very sharp and the less sharp areas. This is also why lens
> > manufacturers say that to fully utilize the DOF scales on modern lenses,
> > use it as if you were shooting two stops wider, ie; shoot at
> f/16, read the
> > scale for f/8. The scales were computed back when lenses were
> not so sharp
> > and film was not nearly as good as today's lenses and film.
> >
> > If your lens exhibits lower contrast, less fine detail
> recorded, etc, then
> > the difference between the sharp and unsharp areas is less apparent thus
> > giving the "impression" of greater DOF. It is a smoother
> transition between
> > the sharp image parts and the less sharp image parts.
> >
> > This is a very well known fact and is why many people think
> that old lenses
> > have greater DOF than new lenses. It's not true, it's simply the visual
> > difference (sharpness contrast) between the sharp and unsharp areas.
> >
> > Jim
> >
> > PS... Depth Of Field is what you see in the photograph. Depth
> Of Focus is
> > at the film plane and, even though (like depth of field) is
> dependent upon
> > the aperture, is a different subject.

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