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Aperture Series: Big Leaf Maple (M240)
This series gives sense of the general rendering style, contrast, color saturation and bokeh of the Zeiss ZM 35mm f/1.4 Distagon. Also, sharpness cuts like a knife through the 3D scene, though it degrades from wind on the leaves at the slower shutter speeds.
Big Leaf Maple
No camera lens correction / lens coding.
ACR settings, Process 2012 Camera Profile = Embedded
Lighting was varying (darkening) steadily; some adjustments were made with a +2 stop push for the f/11 frame. Color rendition varied with lighting (green to magenta and some of this color shift is due to sensor interaction from ray angle).
Wide open at f/1.4, the eye is drawn to the center by vignetting, a classic use for for an f/1.4 lens. But the dominant effect that is striking is the very high contrast and color saturation wide open. This is at the least the match of any and every Leica M Summilux, if not superior.
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Diglloyd Guide to Leica is by yearly subscription. Subscribe now for about 25 cents a day ($90/year).
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Diglloyd Guide to LEICA contains in-depth coverage of Leica M system cameras and lenses, with additional coverage of Leica M Monochrom, Leica Q.
Special emphasis is placed on Leica M lenses and certain Zeiss ZM lenses.
- Make better images by learning how to get the best results right away.
- Save money by choosing the right lens for your needs the first time, particularly the Summilux/Summicron/Elmarit choice and/or Zeiss ZM.
- Make better images, a sort of “cheat sheet” saving yourself months or years of ad-hoc learning. Processing parameters are discussed and shown.
- Jaw-dropping image quality found nowhere else utilizing Retina-grade images up to full camera resolution, plus large crops [past 2 years or so].
- Real world examples with insights found nowhere else. Make sharper images just by understanding lens behavior you won’t read about elsewhere.
- Aperture series from wide open through stopped down, showing the full range of lens performance and bokeh.
- Optical quality analysis of field curvature, focus shift, sharpness, flare, distortion, and performance in the field.
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