Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 08:42 AM 1/18/00 -0500, you wrote: >I have over 60 current generation lenses for Contax SLR, Contax G2, Canon EOS >and Leica M systems. I am unable to distinguish among photos taken with >equivalent lenses for prints up to 8 x 10. Moreover, I find no differences >in the "look" among lens families. It would interesting to have a controlled >study done on this issue of the differences in results. > >That said, I remain fascinated by lens testing and am a big supporter of such >testing. I particularly an interested and appreciative of Erwin's tests. I >believe him. He has my confidence. Even if I can see no differences in my >prints, I like to know the (unused) qualitative differences. > >Tom Shea I think Tom makes an excellent point, and one that many if not most on this list would rather ignore - in terms of real world use, by real photographers, making prints and repros for real world uses, it's damn hard if not impossible to tell a Leica shot from a Canon from a Nikon from, from a Zeiss shot, or, for that matter, a Minolta shot. Does this mean that testing isn't valuable? Of course not. Testing will reveal differences and flaws that it helps to know about when making lens choices. Just because a print from one lens doesn't look "better" than a print of a photo taken by another doesn't mean that the first lens doesn't have qualities - say flare suppression, for example, that will be invaluable in a given situation. Further, the results of lens testing can be inherently interesting. But will we ever get beyond this "mine is bigger than yours" crap relating to brand names, and concentrate on photography with the camera we all prefer? We seem to miss the point, stressed by Erwin over and over in his test reports, that most photographers, shooting under "real-world" conditions, do not begin to have the skills and abilities to make use of that final x% of lens quality that may well be the difference between an L lens and an N or C lens. B. D.