Leitz 90mm Elmar LTM in Color

When I was writing the earlier post on this lens (see: Leitz 90mm f4 Elmar LTM) I realized that I’d only shown black and white images. So since the weather wasn’t particularly pleasant I decided to take some color pictures using it in and around our house:

Above – Orchid.

One of my wife’s plants (I have no idea what it is).

Still life

Another orchid

Blue and white vessels on a red cabinet

Clouds. Taken while walking the dog after the weather had picked up a bit.

Minolta MD 50mm f1.4

I’ve said many times before that my first real camera was a Minolta Hi-Matic 7sii compact rangefinder. For a while I used a Canon SLR (AE-1), but when it came to switch to digital after a period using Canon and Panasonic compact digital cameras, I turned initially to a Konica/Minolta Maxxum DSLR (5D) and when Minolta got out of the camera business, to a Sony Alpha 500. So I’m a bit biased. I’ve always had a fondness for Minolta cameras, and particularly for their lenses. It should be no surprise then that when I started using legacy lenses (with an appropriate adapter) on my Sony NEX 5N, Minolta lenses were among the first I considered.

I particularly like this one. It feels good in the hand. Solid, but not unduly heavy. It’s also quite compact.

The aperture ring clicks nicely and the focus is smooth and precise. Minimum focusing distance is 1.5ft.

It’s very good optically with seven elements in six groups providing superb contrast and resolution. I love the out of focus areas (I hate the world bokeh). I didn’t notice any significant chromatic aberration and the only flare that was apparent was when shooting directly into the sun.

I think mine cost about $50, which is terrific value for money

I use mine with an inexpensive adapter on my Sony NEX 5N where it’s the equivalent of a 75mm lens.

For a more extensive review see: Minolta 50mm f1.4 – the Ultimate Standard Legacy Lens on Casual Photophile.

For some pictures I’ve taken with this lens see:

Tulips
Heron Statues
Abandoned Shacks
Thousand Lotus Terrace
Williams Burial Plot

Tulips

We’ve had some nice, warm, sunny weather on occasion lately, but it’s largely been grim: chilly, often windy, cloudy, rainy etc. The leaves are not yet back on the trees and we’re supposed to get some more snow tomorrow, and – possibly even more next week. So to offset the gloom I thought I’d post something with a bit of color.

We had some people over the other day and after the cooking and cleaning my wife went out to get some flowers and came back with these tulips. I was very impressed by the colors.

Taken with a Sony Nex 5N and Minolta MD 50mm f1.4 lens.

Vines on an old building

Another old film picture taken around the time I started collecting cameras. This one was taken with a Fed 2 rangefinder camera and Industar-61 lens.

It was taken at Pocantico Lake (see Old Waterworks at Pocantico Lake for a better sense of the surroundings. The picture is taken of the facade on the left of the building in the last photograph). It’s a very ‘busy’ photograph and I like the way that it’s not immediately apparent what you’re looking at. It just looks like a bunch of leaves. Gradually, however you start to see the outlines of a window and some weathered stone and you realize that there’s a building under there.

Tarrytown reservoir

This was taken in the early days of my camera collecting. As I recall it was taken with a Zorki 4 rangefinder camera with a Industar 61 55mm f2.8 (not the L/D version) lens. I don’t recall what film was used other than that it wasn’t Kodak Professional BW400CN. I remember this quite clearly because I hadn’t realized (it was a long time since I’d used film) that places like CVS could not process this film (which at the time I found odd as they had sold it to me). I do recall that it was ISO 400 film so it was probably either Tri-X or TMAX.