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mirkoc Registered: Jan 26, 2008 Total Posts: 550 Country: Croatia |
This is a well praised lens. Is it really spectacular as the say? Does it put a smile to your face every time you use it? Is it a lens you can't imagine to sell? |
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mco_970 Registered: Apr 03, 2009 Total Posts: 4385 Country: United States |
CY28 is better in corners for far landscapes than my OM28. |
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AhamB Registered: Jul 11, 2008 Total Posts: 4448 Country: Germany |
mirkoc wrote: ![]() ![]() |
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mirkoc Registered: Jan 26, 2008 Total Posts: 550 Country: Croatia |
I find the OM maybe a small nuance sharper than Yashica. But it isn't field relevant. That should be checked on a higher pixel count sensor. Om flares a bit more and I like Yashica colours better. OM might be better for b&w but that's a speculation now. They are both lovely and weren't expensive. The idea with the distagon is to get a reference (good as it gets) lens primarily for landscapes and perhaps for churches or similar. |
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wfrank Registered: Feb 09, 2011 Total Posts: 1892 Country: Sweden |
I just got it, using it on the 5D2 (and a Contax S2 as it happens) |
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wfrank Registered: Feb 09, 2011 Total Posts: 1892 Country: Sweden |
Two more |
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FlyPenFly Registered: Feb 14, 2011 Total Posts: 4689 Country: United States |
That's a very special lens when mated to the right sensor. |
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AhamB Registered: Jul 11, 2008 Total Posts: 4448 Country: Germany |
FlyPenFly wrote: |
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edwardkaraa Registered: Sep 27, 2004 Total Posts: 5615 Country: Thailand |
It was my first Zeiss lens ever. Bought it at the recommendation of my camera technician a quarter of a century ago and that was it. It was considered the best 28mm lens in its time, and it sure still is one of the best. |
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FlyPenFly Registered: Feb 14, 2011 Total Posts: 4689 Country: United States |
Sorry, my mistake not reading and just looking at the images. I thought this was the Biogon 28mm |
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edwardkaraa Registered: Sep 27, 2004 Total Posts: 5615 Country: Thailand |
FlyPenFly wrote: |
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parsons Registered: Mar 29, 2004 Total Posts: 5270 Country: United Kingdom |
that was my first zeiss lens also, and yes its superb and is my go to lens for landscape work as its my fav focal lenght. ![]() simon |
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freaklikeme Registered: Apr 08, 2005 Total Posts: 4276 Country: United States |
wfrank wrote: |
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ken.vs.ryu Registered: Apr 24, 2005 Total Posts: 2863 Country: N/A |
the only thing I don't like about the 28D is the short focus throw. |
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wfrank Registered: Feb 09, 2011 Total Posts: 1892 Country: Sweden |
Thanks so much Brad. Yeah I do too, in fact her male counterpart was slower moving and erratically trying to keep up with her tempo as she for a brief moment stood still to take a look on the map. He is barely visible in green camera-less sweater above her head. I'd die to know what was caught in that AF-less Nikon camera on her chest :-) |
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mirkoc Registered: Jan 26, 2008 Total Posts: 550 Country: Croatia |
Very nice examples everybody! |
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mco_970 Registered: Apr 03, 2009 Total Posts: 4385 Country: United States |
parsons wrote: |
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JohnJ Registered: Jul 09, 2005 Total Posts: 1790 Country: Australia |
28/2.8 MM ![]() 100% centre ![]() 100% edge ![]() All af F2.8. It obviously improves when stopped down. |
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philip_pj Registered: Apr 03, 2009 Total Posts: 1929 Country: Australia |
It's a wonderful small lens for almost all subjects, even allowing for the fact that most everyone makes a great 28mm (Nikon, OM, Leica). It simply does not comform to the usual formula - but as you see in the excellent images above, it seems to bend the image content around the frame in a remarkable way, and the edge drop off just adds to the character, and seems a small price to pay for the 'walk into the scene' characteristic. |
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jcolwell Registered: Feb 10, 2005 Total Posts: 14799 Country: Canada |
philip_pj wrote: |