10.22.2016

Modern camera meets ancient lens. It's all good. The Sony a6300+Olympus PenF 25mm f2.8 (Half frame).


I gotta say, I think there is much more of a visual difference between various lenses than there is between camera sensor looks. I see it when I interchange older lenses and newer lenses on the same camera body. A recent, Zeiss 24-70mm f4.0 on the Sony a6300 renders very clean colors with open shadows and, since the camera corrects for lens faults automatically everything seems geometrically rectilinear and sharp. When I put a film era lens on the same camera the shadows tend to block up, the saturation can be much higher and while the resolution isn''t the same the sense of smoother, richer color transitions comes through. There is a heaviness to the older film era lenses that isn't a fault or design flaw but a consciously designed look. Maybe it's a look that is no longer in style but in an age where lens design can sometimes seem in lockstep (output wise) from maker to maker it's delightful to have more choices.

These images come from one afternoon when I got curious about what the a6300 would do with the 25mm f2.8 Pen F Half frame lens from 45+ years ago on the front of it. I expected less. I got more. 
The top image shows what I've come to think of as a classic older lens design look. It's really sharp but not in a high resolution way (there is a difference between apparent sharpness and total resolution. It has to do with the intersection of tones. Think in terms of big radius vs. small radius in sharpening...). The older lens gives a high impression of sharpness but digging in to 100% shows less superfine detail than I might get from a new formulation. 

I think one reason that the lens performs as well as it does in the above image is that I'm using it with the light behind me (no chance of flare or veiling glares) and I'm using the lens at f8.0, an f-stops that's almost guaranteed to make any lens look good. I love shooting this old, manual focusing gem with the new a6300 body because I can punch in to magnify, and even set a hyperfocal distance, and then walk around shooting without having to worry about refocusing as long as I stay in the same camera-to-subject distance parameters (as dictated by depth of field). 

The lens has plenty of barrel distortion which is NOT corrected by the camera but, since it's not a modern lens design (with attendant physically uncorrected compromises) it's a very simple barrel distortion with no "mustache" wavy lines and so it's a quick and easy correction in Lightroom or Photoshop. (See below). 


The lens itself is much smaller than modern lenses and is attached to the a6300 via a very small and inexpensive adapter ring. The lens is 100 % metal body construction and the glass on my copy is clean and sparkly. Remember that the lens DOES NOT cover a full frame sensor and, on an APS-C sensor provides the equivalent field of view as a 37.5mm on a full frame camera. A bit short for me but just right for those folks who swear that they love a 35mm lens on their full frame rig. 


Looking back to 1985 when I bought this lens I am happy to report that I spent a whopping $48 at KEH.com and it came in pristine condition. I still have my collection of Pen lenses and often think of buying one of the new Pen F digital cameras just to use with the collection. It's a novel approach to creating a system. 

But I will say that I do think the ancient lens works very, very well in the new world of high res and well behaved sensors. I think I'll continue to keep it...

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Kirk,
I also like the saturated rendering of (older) lenses. Putting old Pen lenses on the Pen F sounds like a good plan. Manual focused lenses with manual tone control on the Pen F may match nicely.
Cheers, Guido

Joe said...

The old Pen 100mm lens works very nicely on my digital Pen F and is very sharp in the f/5.6 range. It also provides a prime lens 200-e focal length that's currently not available new.

The other long Pen-F prime that works well on the Pen-F is an affordable 1990s version of the 135mm Leitz Telyt, as originally suggested in one of Roger's articles at Lensrentals. It's a 270mm-e lens that works well enough with pre-focusing on a Pen that I was able to sharply reliably capture a baseball pitcher in mid-throw.

Dano said...

Go new Pen F, I am excited for you! I love mine, I feel like I did 40 years ago with a new Nikkomat. The love is back!

jw52tx said...

After swearing that I was done forever with buying cameras ( Sony a7mII has fit the bill perfectly -except for sports- for several years) I called Precision and got them to put a Pen F aside with a 17mm Olympus lens. My rationale was simple, if I was going to drive all that way north to eat a Sonoran hot dog at T-Locs on Burnet I might as well go a few blocks more and get a camera. I've been using a very wide assortment of lenses on the Sony but the old OM primes are among my favorites. And there is a nice rebate on the body if you buy one of their 4/3 lenses! My only complaint- I still haven't figured out how to easily change the metering mode- the menu is just too much for my pre-computer mind. I've just been using exp comp. When you mentioned the Pen F in this blog I just thought I'd give you a little push.
Jim

Post a Comment

We Moderate Comments, Yours might not appear right after you hit return. Be patient; I'm usually pretty quick on getting comments up there. Try not to hit return again and again.... If you disagree with something I've written please do so civilly. Be nice or see your comments fly into the void. Anonymous posters are not given special privileges or dispensation. If technology alone requires you to be anonymous your comments will likely pass through moderation if you "sign" them. A new note: Don't tell me how to write or how to blog! I can't make you comment but I don't want to wade through spam!

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.