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Four New Summarits; First-Class Tools For The Working Photographer:
The actual designs are what appear to be a heavily modified Cooke Triplet with a concave front element (35mm), two Gauss-type symmetrical derivatives (50mm and 75mm), and another Cooke Triplet (90mm). Despite Leica’s own slightly misleading descriptions, neither the 75mm or 90mm are “short tele” lenses: this is used as shorthand for the focal length, not the optical design. True tele lenses have a rear negative group to shorten the lens physically, which does nothing for contrast or image quality. What we have not looked at so far is handling, which can be summed up in one word: “sweet.” The 35mm and 50mm both have “spur” or finger-grip focusing, just like the very first Leica lenses 80+ years ago. This is quick, easy, compact, and allows focusing by touch, so that by the time you have your camera at your eye, you have only to make the final adjustments using the rangefinder. The larger 75mm and 90mm have conventional collar focusing, because they are too big for finger-spurs.
All controls—mounting and removing the lens, focusing, setting the aperture—are
as smooth as you would expect from Leica. There is a 1/3 stop click to f/2.8,
then 1/2 stop clicks to f/16. Paint-filled engravings are in yellow for feet
and focal length (beside the focusing scale) and white for everything else.
All four lenses have the 6-bit coding for use with the M8.
For us, it kept coming back to the same thing. Imagine that you are going
out to take pictures. It doesn’t matter much whether you’re shooting
just for the pleasure of it or (as we have been doing recently) shooting for
a specific purpose, in our case for a major extension of www.rogerandfrances.com.
You want a kit that’s small, light, sweet handling, and easy to use, stuff
you don’t have to think about. You want to spend your time taking pictures,
not playing with the equipment. That’s what the Summarits are made for.
If you want bling, they’re a waste of money. If you want pictures, they’re
a very good value indeed. For further information on the art and craft of photography from Roger Hicks and Frances Schultz, go to www.rogerandfrances.com.
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