Difference between revisions of "Fast lens"
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|| [[Micro Four Thirds|µ4/3]] || f0.95 || f1.8 || f2.8 || µ4/3 camera makers [[Olympus]] and [[Panasonic]] deliver some fast lenses, 3rd-party lens makers the same lenses as for APS-C. The result is a similar available lens speed palette for both sensor sizes, APS-C and µ4/3. | || [[Micro Four Thirds|µ4/3]] || f0.95 || f1.8 || f2.8 || µ4/3 camera makers [[Olympus]] and [[Panasonic]] deliver some fast lenses, 3rd-party lens makers the same lenses as for APS-C. The result is a similar available lens speed palette for both sensor sizes, APS-C and µ4/3. | ||
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− | || cine lens (many with [[C-mount]]) || f0.95 || f1.4 || f1.7 || The benchmark is slower than the fastest ever cine lens which was for [[35mm]] half-frame format, the legendary [[bokeh]] giant [[Zeiss]] [[Planar]] 1:0.7 f=50mm. The lens was used by Stanley Kubrick for his film ''Barry Lyndon'' which received 4 Oscars, one for the camera, and by the ''NASA'' for moon flight shots! Many [[C-mount]] cine lenses were constructed for 16mm cine film or sensors up to 1" size. Some are sufficient for and adaptable to µ4/3 cameras, a few even sufficient for [[APS-C]] sensors. But surprisingly the | + | || cine lens (many with [[C-mount]]) || f0.95 || f1.4 || f1.7 || The benchmark is slower than the fastest ever cine lens which was for [[35mm]] half-frame format, the legendary [[bokeh]] giant [[Zeiss]] [[Planar]] 1:0.7 f=50mm. The lens was used by Stanley Kubrick for his film ''Barry Lyndon'' which received 4 Oscars, one for the camera, and by the ''NASA'' for moon flight shots! Many [[C-mount]] cine lenses were constructed for 16mm cine film or sensors up to 1" size. Some are sufficient for and adaptable to µ4/3 cameras, a few even sufficient for [[APS-C]] sensors. But surprisingly the palette of available lens speeds is more alike that of lenses for [[35mm]] frame format 24x36mm. |
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Revision as of 14:13, 4 October 2014
This article is a gallery of very fast lenses beyond average "fast" definition. See also lens speed (=max. aperture of lens)
For APS-C format these are lenses with max. aperture of at least f1.4!<br(>
For 35mm film frame format these are lenses faster than max. aperture f1.7 since
the average 50mm SLR system standard lens already has a speed of f1.7 or f1.8!
For medium format these are lenses with max. aperture of at least f2.0!<br(>
For large format these are lenses with max. aperture of at least f2.5!<br(>
Contents
"fast" classification
format | benchmark | quite fast lens | common fast lens | notes about the "very fast" definition given above and about the benchmark |
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large | f2.5 | f3.5 | f6.3 | f2.5 equals the benchmark set by the Kodak Aero in 1940 |
medium | f1.8 | f2.8 | f3.5 | f2.0 lenses established the available light photography with the Ernostar in 1924. The 2nd version of the Ernostar also set the benchmark already in 1925. |
35mm | f0.95 | f1.4 | f1.7 | f1.6, because faster than f1.7. f1.7 is a lens speed which is almost average for the SLR normal lenses since the 1960s which were also the kit lenses. Fast lenses for leaf shutter SLRs reach only f1.9 max. lens speed. The benchmark is defined by the so-called Canon "Dream Lens" for rangefinder cameras. Actually it's been surpassed by a few faster lenses. |
APS-C | f0.95 | f1.8 | f2.8 | f1.4 because smaller format than 35mm requires faster lenses for achieving almost similar depth of field |
µ4/3 | f0.95 | f1.8 | f2.8 | µ4/3 camera makers Olympus and Panasonic deliver some fast lenses, 3rd-party lens makers the same lenses as for APS-C. The result is a similar available lens speed palette for both sensor sizes, APS-C and µ4/3. |
cine lens (many with C-mount) | f0.95 | f1.4 | f1.7 | The benchmark is slower than the fastest ever cine lens which was for 35mm half-frame format, the legendary bokeh giant Zeiss Planar 1:0.7 f=50mm. The lens was used by Stanley Kubrick for his film Barry Lyndon which received 4 Oscars, one for the camera, and by the NASA for moon flight shots! Many C-mount cine lenses were constructed for 16mm cine film or sensors up to 1" size. Some are sufficient for and adaptable to µ4/3 cameras, a few even sufficient for APS-C sensors. But surprisingly the palette of available lens speeds is more alike that of lenses for 35mm frame format 24x36mm. |
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APS-C format
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average "fast lens" samples
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