Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Erwin Puts wrote: > > That people perceive Hasselblad pictures as sharper has nothing to do > with the optical qualities but the film area, as so many > contributions have discussed and the lower enlargement factor. > BTW: I did not state that every 35mm lens is better than the 4/150. I > said specifically that the apo 90 was better as shown above. I have > the highest regards for Zeiss lenses, but their strength is the > smoothness of rendition of outlines and the beautiful definition of > fine textures. Erwin, do the differences in the Leica vs Zeiss MTF figures suggest tighter manufacturing tolerances on the part of Leica, or deliberate choices made by the lens designers in order to balance various aspects of lens performance? Does better MTF = worse bokeh? Subjectively, some of the sharpest optics I've ever owned were the 75 and 150 mm Mamiya 6 lenses but they also seemed to have some of the ugliest bokeh (I love 'em at f/8 though). My pre-aspheric Leica glass and Zeiss glass doesn't have the same ultra-sharp look but they're very nice all-around performers and I don't so much mind letting backgrounds go out of focus when I use them. - -- Jeff Segawa Somewhere in Boulder, Colorado