I had to compliment you on the beautiful Staghorn Fern Jim Healey
and have nothing to add to the foregoing tech talk other than that
you will learn to overlook the 35L's minor flaws because of the rest
of it's major goodness!
Liscia wrote:
I had to compliment you on the beautiful Staghorn Fern Jim Healey
and have nothing to add to the foregoing tech talk other than that
you will learn to overlook the 35L's minor flaws because of the rest
of it's major goodness!
The Staghorn is in my Dad's garden and I'll pass your compliment onto him. That one is a few years old (He's 82 and can't remember) ... and was about the size of a coconut when he "planted" it. They occur naturally in the local rainforest but are a protected species and must be legally purchased through a nursery. I'm not much of a gardener so that's the limit of my knowledge
jjlphoto wrote:
You will also see this with German glass (Zeiss, Leica). It is essentially a by-product of fine lens design. It is possible to design a lens without this phenomena, but then the trade off for very highly corrected axial/longitudinal aberration can be often be overly harsh or extremely busy bokeh.
wow... and people bag on the TS-E 45 for CA, but I don't think it is this bad... the other problem is that f4 or f11 and trees outdoors are a natural for this FL, so it isn't a contrived test.