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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2011 4:04 am Post subject: Itoh's Triumph: First high speed Japanese Portrait lens |
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uhoh7 wrote:
Canon LTM 85/1.5 version 2.
In 1943 Leica introduced the 85/1.5 Summarex and the high speed 35mm portrait lens was born.
In this world there are Leica snobs, the rest of us, and a few good men: the leica killers.
Hiroshi Itoh, along with Jirou Mukai, were Canon's Leica killers. This lens, when it appeared in 1952 as the 85/1.5 serenar, was the first high speed japanese portrait lens and a direct challenge to Leica.
It was more than a challenge really, because this lens wiped the floor with the Summarex. The Nikon 85/1.5 soon followed, but only 1,353 were made.
I found this one in the UK and it arrived today It's identical in optics to the original serenar, but slightly lighter.
SO lets take a look:
Wide open portraits first, that's why I bought it
my first one:
OK OK, but what does it do at f8?
yow
This lens has picked up a funny reputation best charactised by: "Huge and not very good until its stopped down", a quote from
http://www.antiquecameras.net/canonrflens.html
It does weigh around 700 grams, hehe. But funny enough its a pleasure to shoot
And the question is seldom, "Is it sharp edge to edge wide open?" This is pretty silly, as we all know mtf will never be as much at 1.2, 1.1 or in this case an 85/1.5, as it is by f4.
The question is really, what does it do wide open? What is it's character?
One thing: at F8 it's hellachiously sharp---I think accross the frame. I added no contrast at all in the infinity landscape shot. Close in @f2 it seems quite crisp
Next, depending on interest: bokeh. _________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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kansalliskala
Joined: 19 Jul 2007 Posts: 5046 Location: Southern Finland countryside
Expire: 2016-12-30
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Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2011 8:28 am Post subject: |
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kansalliskala wrote:
Wonderful lens but please get a silver body. _________________ MF: Kodak DCS SLR/c; Samsung NX10; OM-10; Canon T50
Zuiko 28/3.5, Distagon 35/2.8; Yashica ML 50/2;
Zuiko 50/1.4; S-M-C 120/2.8; Zuiko 135/3.5; 200/5;
Tamron AD1 135/2.8, Soligor 180/3.5; Tamron AD1 300/5.6
Tamron zooms: 01A, Z-210
Yashicaflex C; Київ 4 + Юпитер 8, 11; Polaroid 100; Olympus XA; Yashica T3
Museum stuff: Certo-Phot; Tele-Edixon 135; Polaris 90-190; Asahi Bellows; Ixus IIs
Projects: Agfa Isolette III (no shutter), Canon AE-1D (no sensor),
Nikon D80 (dead), The "Peace Camera"
AF: Canon, Tokina, Sigma Video: JVC GZ-MG275E |
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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Sun Jul 24, 2011 8:55 am Post subject: |
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uhoh7 wrote:
kansalliskala wrote: |
Wonderful lens but please get a silver body. |
haha, I bet they are sleek, like
85/1.9 also by Itoh, as are:
the center 3 50s above
Canon LTM Lens designers:
Mr Hiroshi Itoh .............28mm f/3.5
Mr Hiroshi Itoh.............. 28mm f/2.8
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ..............35mm f/3.2
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ..............35mm f/2.8
Mr Hiroshi Itoh.............. 50mm f/1.2
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ..............50mm f/1.4
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ..............50mm f/1.8
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ..............85mm f/1.5
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ...............85mm f/1.9
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ...............100mm f/3.5
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ...............135mm f/2.5M
Mr Hiroshi Itoh ...............200mm f/3.5M
Mr Jirou Mukai ...............25mm f/3.5
Mr Jirou Mukai ...............35mm f/1.5
Mr Jirou Mukai ...............35mm f/1.8
Mr Jirou Mukai ...............35mm f/2
Mr Jirou Mukai ...............50mm f/0.95
Mr Jirou Mukai ...............50mm f/2.2
Mr Jirou Mukai ................50mm f/2.8
Mr Jirou Mukai ................85mm f/1.8
Mr Jirou Mukai ................100mm f/2
Mr Jirou Mukai ................135mm f/3.5
Mr Masana Kuroki........... 35mm f/3.5
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........50mm f/1.5
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........50mm f/1.9
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........8.5cm F/2
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........85mm f/2
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........10cm f/4
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........100mm f/4
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........1000mm f/11
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........400mm f/4.5
Mr Masana Kuroki............. 600mm f/5.6
Mr Masana Kuroki. ...........800mm f/8
Mr Ryouzou Furukawa .....5cm f/2 SK & CCCo
Mr Ryouzou Furukawa ......5cm f/3.5 SK & CCCo
Mr Ryouzou Furukawa ......50mm f/3.5
Mr Ryouzou Furukawa .......5cm f/1.5 SK X-Ray lens and was adapted to fit J & JS
Mr Ryouzou Furukawa .......75mm f/4.5 SK
Mr Ryouzou Furukawa .......13.5cm f/4 SK & CCCo
Mr Shuji Koyanagi .............19mm f/3.5
credit to canonRFinder at RFF--TY sir _________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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woodrim
Joined: 14 Jan 2010 Posts: 4060 Location: Charleston
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 2:25 pm Post subject: |
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woodrim wrote:
Seems a very sweet lens. You have gone about collecting some very nice glass. _________________ Regards,
Woodrim |
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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 5:53 pm Post subject: |
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uhoh7 wrote:
woodrim wrote: |
Seems a very sweet lens. You have gone about collecting some very nice glass. |
Nex lens compatablity + MFlenses.com = serious trouble.
This is the most technically demanding lens I own right now wide open.
DOF is sinnfully tight, and you must be very steady as well,
The lens, like so many Canon RFs, is perhaps underated.
Someday I will find a helios 40--I was thinking this one might be similar, but in fact it's nowhere near so swirly.
a few more samples:
the nose
dusk, over my jeep hood
100
all these at 1.5
for the record, I'm tongue in cheek in some of my descriptions---I am no expert, but just an enthusiast _________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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woodrim
Joined: 14 Jan 2010 Posts: 4060 Location: Charleston
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 5:59 pm Post subject: |
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woodrim wrote:
Precisely same focal length and max aperture as Helios 40 and Cyclop, so likely same focus challenge, but better results at wide open. White or bright areas get lots of ghosting with Cyclop. _________________ Regards,
Woodrim |
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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 9:50 pm Post subject: |
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uhoh7 wrote:
woodrim wrote: |
Precisely same focal length and max aperture as Helios 40 and Cyclop, so likely same focus challenge, but better results at wide open. White or bright areas get lots of ghosting with Cyclop. |
I was surpised to see no purple fringe in the 1.5 night shot into the bookstore.
This lens is often labeled "soft wide open", but it is devilshly hard to focus and sensitive to light and movement.
100
100
what do we think about this performance from an 85 @ 1.5?
bokeh:
This is by far my most challenging lens to focus, eclisping even the soligor 135/2
It's also considered to have low contrast wide open--but I have not touched the blacks on any of these. _________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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ChromaticAberration
Joined: 23 Dec 2010 Posts: 819 Location: Portugal
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 10:00 pm Post subject: |
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ChromaticAberration wrote:
Wow, so nice!
Dunno how it would handle larger sensors but.. damn! _________________ Body: Fujifilm X-E1
Landscapes: Samyang 12mm f/2 NCS CS
Macro: Vivitar Series 1 105mm Æ’/2.5
Portrait: Helios-44 58mm Æ’/2.0
Low-light: SMC Takumar 50mm Æ’/1.4
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a pнoтograpн ιѕ neιтнer тaĸen or ѕeιzed вy ғorce. ιт oғғerѕ ιтѕelғ υp. ιт ιѕ тнe pнoтo тнaт тaĸeѕ yoυ. one мυѕт noт тaĸe pнoтoѕ.†– нenrι carтιer-вreѕѕon |
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woodrim
Joined: 14 Jan 2010 Posts: 4060 Location: Charleston
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 10:12 pm Post subject: |
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woodrim wrote:
Those toes need to be covered... and the second toe SHOULD NOT be longer than the big toe. Haven't you seen Shallow Hal?
The last picture is very nice as is the photo at dusk. I'm seeing similarities to the Cyclop I have. Unfortunately I do not have the Helios 40. The bookcase shot looks like it could have come from the Cyclop with that Fiction ghosting.
I think the claims of softness at wide open may come from the focusing difficulty and the lighting conditions. The contrast and color are going to be influenced by the Camera, I think, and the NEX shots I've seen (many from you) are excellent. From what I've seen, I'd take your results over a Helios 40/Cyclop, but there are the similarities I've mentioned - to include low CA and good sharpness at point of focus. _________________ Regards,
Woodrim |
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woodrim
Joined: 14 Jan 2010 Posts: 4060 Location: Charleston
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 10:13 pm Post subject: |
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woodrim wrote:
ChromaticAberration wrote: |
Wow, so nice!
Dunno how it would handle larger sensors but.. damn! |
Remember, the NEX is APS-C, not 4/3. _________________ Regards,
Woodrim |
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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2011 10:41 pm Post subject: |
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uhoh7 wrote:
woodrim wrote: |
Those toes need to be covered... and the second toe SHOULD NOT be longer than the big toe. Haven't you seen Shallow Hal?
The last picture is very nice as is the photo at dusk. I'm seeing similarities to the Cyclop I have. Unfortunately I do not have the Helios 40. The bookcase shot looks like it could have come from the Cyclop with that Fiction ghosting.
I think the claims of softness at wide open may come from the focusing difficulty and the lighting conditions. The contrast and color are going to be influenced by the Camera, I think, and the NEX shots I've seen (many from you) are excellent. From what I've seen, I'd take your results over a Helios 40/Cyclop, but there are the similarities I've mentioned - to include low CA and good sharpness at point of focus. |
I'd love to test it on an M9, who will send me one for a few days
There is something highly attractive about this one--it's a 700 gram monster, but very pleasant to shoot with on the Nex--handling wise.
It does ghost a bit, no doubt---with considerable and unpredicatble variations
the summilux 75/1.4 is now going for 3k at auction, which makes the 500 or so these seem to go for a bit more palatable. (kevincameras wants 1k of course)
AT the other end of the spectrum is the roki 85/1.4--damn nice for around 200USD.
But this is a real piece of history--an original GTO if you like---that still seems to deliver the goods 58 years after it's debut
and while we carefully nitpick the wide open results (which I love to do), at F8 I doubt there are that many sharper 85s.
Pretty good for the first Japanese attempt at a fast 85. No 2, the nikon RF 85/1.5 goes for as much as 5k! Only 1300 made.
This one was probably made in 1955--no later than 1957. How many of these were produced in total?
2344.
Less in fact than the 85/1.8, which really surprised me.
Well, you say, those old Japanese RFs how many did they really make?
The Canon 50/1.2 LTM
OVER 46,000!!!! _________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 7:33 am Post subject: |
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uhoh7 wrote:
At 2.8 the lens seems very sharp across the frame
DOF is still a handfull, though (i will have to shoot some at f/2
Back to 1.5:
missed again but I still like it
note her shirt under the arm on the lower right for focal point.
this one must be around 5.6 or more:
and one last, again wide open, which I like:
_________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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woodrim
Joined: 14 Jan 2010 Posts: 4060 Location: Charleston
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Posted: Wed Jul 27, 2011 2:15 pm Post subject: |
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woodrim wrote:
I find no fault with that lens. I'd put it on my watch list, but suspect will never find it within my price range. I have the Cyclop and a Vivitar 90mm, which is really 87mm, but your comment about the Samyang various name f/1.4 lenses has got me looking that way. Perhaps I've found a good candidate for my 60th birthday... if anyone actually asks. _________________ Regards,
Woodrim |
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uhoh7
Joined: 24 Nov 2010 Posts: 1300 Location: Idaho, USA
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Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2011 10:21 am Post subject: |
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uhoh7 wrote:
woodrim wrote: |
I find no fault with that lens. I'd put it on my watch list, but suspect will never find it within my price range. I have the Cyclop and a Vivitar 90mm, which is really 87mm, but your comment about the Samyang various name f/1.4 lenses has got me looking that way. Perhaps I've found a good candidate for my 60th birthday... if anyone actually asks. |
Ive seen the samyang go for as cheap as 120USD on ebay, and results abound on flickr and elsewhere as the lens is very popular.
review:
http://www.photozone.de/canon_eos_ff/483-samyang_85_14_5d?start=2
_________________ Making MFlenses safe for the letter *L* |
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Michael Lindsay
Joined: 05 Apr 2022 Posts: 1 Location: UK
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Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2022 4:08 pm Post subject: |
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Michael Lindsay wrote:
This is probably a dead thread but if not..
I would love some more info on the Canon 85mm F1.5
I have a black and silver version with purple coatings... I believe the mark 2? ... was there ever an amber coated version?
ALSO I'd really like to buy a copy of Peter's book... anyone have one for sale?
Does anyone know who designed the Retrofocal 19mm FL OR the FL 58mm F1.2... and of Hiroshi Itoh or Jirou Mukai was not involved what did they design post LTM lenses?
thank you
Michael
PS sorry if it offends anyone but I rehoused my LTM Canon's like this
https://www.instagram.com/p/CTPrpRnifaC/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link |
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fiftyonepointsix
Joined: 30 Apr 2017 Posts: 292
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Posted: Wed Apr 06, 2022 11:12 pm Post subject: |
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fiftyonepointsix wrote:
The Canon 85/1.5 uses the same 1-3-2-1: 7 element in 4 group layout of the Simlar 5cm F1.5. This is a double-Gauss design where the front doublet was split into a triplet with elements of lesser strength. Some people describe it as a "Half Sonnar", thrown off by the front triplet.
Of late- these lenses have increased in value 8x over a few years ago. They are now priced with the Nikkor 8.5cm F1.5 and the Summarex.
I'm not offended by people converting LTM to other mounts.
Eight is Enough by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr
I've converted enough TO LTM mount to balance it out. |
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