T
Tyler Monson
Guest
Erik,
You and I live in different parts of the photographic realm. While it is true that most lenses for 35-mm SLRs and 35-mm point-n-shoot cameras are now autofocus, those for 35-mm rangefinder cameras (except Contax), and all lenses for medium and large-format cameras are still manual focus.
Recently, I read that most professional video photographers bypass the autofocus on their cameras. Perhaps the professional still photojournalists do, too. My own, very limited experience with autofocus has been that it can misread at the worst possible time and cost you an important image.
Too, on these forums I have read many postings by people who want, for one reason or another, to be able to focus the lenses on their digital cameras manually and wish for a more traditional lens with a helical focusing mount.
So I think that manual-focus lenses are still viable. Trouble is, it is the amateur snap-shooters who, by sheer number, dominate the camera market. Far more amateurs than professionals own even the high-end cameras (Hasselblad, Nikon F5, et cetera), so what we are being offered now is what will attract those amateurs.
I was putting forward the 10-mm SOM Berthiot f/1.9 lens as an example of one of many existing camera lenses that would cover the five-megapixel CCDs used in the current crop of 'consumer' digital cameras by Sony and others. The lens has a workable range of f/stops (down to f/22) and, on these CCDs, would yield the equivalent of a 40-mm lens on a 35-mm camera. I've never paid any attention to the technical specifications, such as line-pairs, on lenses so I can't help you there.
Must say that, as a working photographer (as opposed to an engineer), when I look at the raw image coming from the digital camera and see how fuzzy it is without any sharpening algorithms being applied, I can't help wondering just how important the sharpness of the lens is. Obviously, as CCD resolution increases, it will become more important. This is where a digital body capable of accepting the whole gamut of lenses (and not just those from one source) would be handy. Right now, the choice of algorithms may be more important.
All this is fun to discuss, but what is really great is taking digital pictures and then going into the virtual darkroom. I only regret that I probably won't live long enough to see (and be able to afford) a 20-megapixel six-by-six centimeter CCD.
Cheers,
Tyler Monson
Seattle, Washington
You and I live in different parts of the photographic realm. While it is true that most lenses for 35-mm SLRs and 35-mm point-n-shoot cameras are now autofocus, those for 35-mm rangefinder cameras (except Contax), and all lenses for medium and large-format cameras are still manual focus.
Recently, I read that most professional video photographers bypass the autofocus on their cameras. Perhaps the professional still photojournalists do, too. My own, very limited experience with autofocus has been that it can misread at the worst possible time and cost you an important image.
Too, on these forums I have read many postings by people who want, for one reason or another, to be able to focus the lenses on their digital cameras manually and wish for a more traditional lens with a helical focusing mount.
So I think that manual-focus lenses are still viable. Trouble is, it is the amateur snap-shooters who, by sheer number, dominate the camera market. Far more amateurs than professionals own even the high-end cameras (Hasselblad, Nikon F5, et cetera), so what we are being offered now is what will attract those amateurs.
I was putting forward the 10-mm SOM Berthiot f/1.9 lens as an example of one of many existing camera lenses that would cover the five-megapixel CCDs used in the current crop of 'consumer' digital cameras by Sony and others. The lens has a workable range of f/stops (down to f/22) and, on these CCDs, would yield the equivalent of a 40-mm lens on a 35-mm camera. I've never paid any attention to the technical specifications, such as line-pairs, on lenses so I can't help you there.
Must say that, as a working photographer (as opposed to an engineer), when I look at the raw image coming from the digital camera and see how fuzzy it is without any sharpening algorithms being applied, I can't help wondering just how important the sharpness of the lens is. Obviously, as CCD resolution increases, it will become more important. This is where a digital body capable of accepting the whole gamut of lenses (and not just those from one source) would be handy. Right now, the choice of algorithms may be more important.
All this is fun to discuss, but what is really great is taking digital pictures and then going into the virtual darkroom. I only regret that I probably won't live long enough to see (and be able to afford) a 20-megapixel six-by-six centimeter CCD.
Cheers,
Tyler Monson
Seattle, Washington