Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/10/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]B.D, oh Sage One, There are two components to this issue: 1 is price of the lens, and 2 is the quality of the lens. The cost of the 75 summilux can get in the way and cloud judgment. I have the lens already, the mist has faded. I'm not going to think about the price/value at all, I'm just going to use it. I will use it at every aperture and in different light situations. I shot a roll at 1.4 already, and I've started at 2 and 2.8. I will expand on this and make a decision as to if I need it, or want it, once I actually truly know the thing inside out. Thanks, Matt. On 8 Oct 2004, at 21:31, B. D. Colen wrote: > There are really only four possible reasons for hanging onto the 75 > Summilux: > 1. You like its 'fingerprint;' > 2. You need/want a 75 mm lens, and only a Leica lens will do for you; > 3. You need the fastest 75 mm lens that money can buy; > 4. You need one 1.4 lens and you don't have a 50 or 35 1.4 > > If you don't need the 75 mm focal length - and have another 1.4 - get > rid of it; > If you need a 75, but don't need a 1.4, sell it, buy the very nice > Cosina 75, and do something interesting with the money you'll recoup; > If you don't need a 75, but need a 1.4 and don't own another, consider > selling the 75 and replacing it with a used 35 Summilux ASPH, or with > some sort of 50 1.4 (I'm partial to the 50 1.5 Nokton, but I know there > are people who don't like it. > > The point is that before you can decide whether to keep or get rid of > the lens, you need to know why you'd be keeping it. > > B. D. > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >