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Leica R 80mm Sumilux and 135mm Elmarit


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John

 

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Have you looked at the existing threads? There is a discussion of the

80mm Summilux under a question I asked comparing it to the 90mm

Summicron. To answer your question the 135mm design dates from the

original lens set for the original Leicaflex in 1965, whereas the

Summilux appeared in 1980 or thereabouts. This tells you something.

The 135mm apparently has very pleasing qualities and is meant to be

an excellent portrait lens (whatever that means - I suspect it has

nice bokeh and to be a little soft at wide apertures) but in terms of

raw resolutiuon the Summilux is much better. I bet you the Summilux

outperforms the Elmarit at f2.8 by quite a margin. The 135mm is in

need of a redesign in my opinion - I bet Leica think this too, but

the 135mm focal length seems to be somewhat out of favor these days

compared to the 90mm and 180mm. Of course the best lens in terms of

performance is the 100m Apo Macro which will beat both the Summilux

and the Elmarit in terms of performance at f2.8 with performance to

spare. You can pick up a secondhand 135mm Elmarit pretty cheap, so if

I was you I would buy one and see whether you like it, if it does not

work out you have not spent a great deal of money. The Apo-Macro and

the Summilux would be expensive mistakes....

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John,

If your looking for a portrait lens, you can't do any better than the

90mm f2.8 Elmarit. That lens is the reason I bought a Leica R

camera. It was picked as one of the 10 best lenses made recently by

a European Magazine, and was the only lens on the list that didn't

cost a fortune. Mine is tack sharp at f2.8 ( I tested it at over 80

LPMM at 2.8) and has the most beautiful color reproduction. It focus

very close (under 28 inches), is compact, has a built in hood, and a

55mm filter size. F2.8 is about the minuimum aperture for getting

most of a face in focus, so I never use anything faster for portraits

anyway.

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Hi John,

I have the 135 Elmarit and use it extensively for portrait and short

telephoto work. It is not a 'blow-your-mind-away-sharp' kind of

lens, but it has the most beautiful rendition of colours I have

seen and give very smooth and pleasant skin tones and still is

sharp enough to bring out details without being hash. I like this

length better than the 80 or 90 which I find a little too short. I hate

to stick a lens in front of people. Conversely the 180 is too long

for portrait. I never seem to find enought working room with

180mm lens. Even though the 80 lux is 2 stops faster I think to

get faces in focus you can't go much lower than 2.8. If I

remember correctly the 80 lux doesn't allow you to use converter

wherease the 135 works very well with the 2x if you stop down a

bit. May not have any relevance to your choice of photography. I

also use the 135 with an extension tube which gives me a nice

1:3 for most flower shorts. In this mode, stop down to f11 it is

very sharp. Hope you find this helpful.

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