Fuji X: The New Meyer 50/0.95 Almost Half Off Before Introduction!
On 2018-04-01 16:04:46 +0000, RichA said:
On Thursday, 29 March 2018 10:21:54 UTC-4, android wrote: Ester greatings! Enjoy: http://info.meyer-optik-goerlitz.com/nocturnusiii_presale -- teleportation kills Horrifying spherical aberration wide-open. Good to know! -- teleportation kills |
Fuji X: The New Meyer 50/0.95 Almost Half Off Before Introduction!
On 2018-04-02 00:59:16 +0000, RichA said:
On Sunday, 1 April 2018 12:30:48 UTC-4, android wrote: On 2018-04-01 16:04:46 +0000, RichA said: On Thursday, 29 March 2018 10:21:54 UTC-4, android wrote: Ester greatings! Enjoy: http://info.meyer-optik-goerlitz.com/nocturnusiii_presale -- teleportation kills Horrifying spherical aberration wide-open. Good to know! -- teleportation kills Made in Germany, impeccable construction quality no doubt, though I don't know anything about the actual design. More images are needed to evaluate the thing. Also, they said "round" bokeh (as in lights?) but the portrait of the blond woman shows the typical ovoid shapes we see from many fast lenses. That's cateyes! They reflect the shape of the aperture at the edges of the captures. The Sigma 85/1.4 has got some flac for that too... The Meyer have multiple aperture blades but that won't help them out with this issue. My Schneider 300/5.6, MF no IS has that to but I've never goy around to stop it down that much so that I can study the effect. Maybe at me next visit to them African plains! :-)) -- teleportation kills |
Fuji X: The New Meyer 50/0.95 Almost Half Off Before Introduction!
On 2018-04-02 22:40:06 +0000, RichA said:
On Sunday, 1 April 2018 23:07:58 UTC-4, android wrote: On 2018-04-02 00:59:16 +0000, RichA said: On Sunday, 1 April 2018 12:30:48 UTC-4, android wrote: On 2018-04-01 16:04:46 +0000, RichA said: On Thursday, 29 March 2018 10:21:54 UTC-4, android wrote: Ester greatings! Enjoy: http://info.meyer-optik-goerlitz.com/nocturnusiii_presale -- teleportation kills Horrifying spherical aberration wide-open. Good to know! -- teleportation kills Made in Germany, impeccable construction quality no doubt, though I don't know anything about the actual design. More images are needed to evaluate the thing. Also, they said "round" bokeh (as in lights?) but the portrait of the blond woman shows the typical ovoid shapes we see from many fast lenses. That's cateyes! They reflect the shape of the aperture at the edges of the captures. The Sigma 85/1.4 has got some flac for that too... The Meyer have multiple aperture blades but that won't help them out with this issue. My Schneider 300/5.6, MF no IS has that to but I've never goy around to stop it down that much so that I can study the effect. Maybe at me next visit to them African plains! :-)) -- teleportation kills It's a form of astimatism. If you have the lights as point sources in-focus at the edge of the field, you can see the distortion. At the edge of the image the whole aperture ain't in the path of the light and that is that that's causing the effect. Just like the classic hexagon bokeh reflects the six blades of the aperture. Those lenses do not need to be astigmatic when the subject is in focus. Some folks crave it! https://www.flickr.com/groups/catseye/ -- teleportation kills |
Fuji X: The New Meyer 50/0.95 Almost Half Off Before Introduction!
On 2018-04-04 01:29:52 +0000, RichA said:
Also, thing has 15 aperture blades so not hexagonal. The hexagonal shape is the classic bokeh outline from classic lenses as they usually had six blades... -- teleportation kills |
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