Luminous Landscape Forum
Equipment & Techniques => Cameras, Lenses and Shooting gear => Topic started by: hasselbladfan on April 04, 2019, 04:36:06 am
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Sigma just announced their (massive) line-up for the L mount. 11 lenses in one go! Leica and Hasselblad can barely deliver 1-2 lenses per year!
Does anybody has an idea why the 40mm 1.4 is so much heavier / larger than the 35mm / 50mm 1.4?
Is it so much better?
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It appears to make good lenses it is easier to make them big than small...
Sigma makes large and heavy ones, Leica small and lightweight ones, but at a price
Yes i have the 40mm Sigma and it is a gem
If you need a lens that captures the images sharp corner to corner at f1.4 this is one that does.
see also:
https://www.lenstip.com/index.php?test=obiektywu&test_ob=548
and
https://diglloyd.com/blog/2019/20190109_1813-Sigma40f1_4A-aseries-LawsRailroadMuseum-Locomotive.html
+
https://www.lensrentals.com/blog/2019/03/mtf-results-for-recent-sigma-art-lenses/
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Sigma just announced their (massive) line-up for the L mount. 11 lenses in one go! Leica and Hasselblad can barely deliver 1-2 lenses per year!
Does anybody has an idea why the 40mm 1.4 is so much heavier / larger than the 35mm / 50mm 1.4?
Is it so much better?
But aren't the Sigma lenses existing lenses reworked for a different new mount? If they are that'll be why they're announced so many so quickly. I'd imagine that blank sheet designs take a lot longer than adapting an existing one to a new mount.
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The L mount Sigmas are SLR lenses adapted for mirrorless. But they're freakin' huge lenses on SLRs too! Sigma is going all out for high quality and speed using modern designs & manufacturing processes. This means lotsa lens elements, which means increased bulk and weight. Not my cuppa, but just the thing for some other folks.
-Dave-
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The L mount Sigmas are SLR lenses adapted for mirrorless. But they're freakin' huge lenses on SLRs too!
Add 20mm for the built in mirrorless adapter.
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Sigma is going all out for high quality and speed using modern designs & manufacturing processes.
And they're succeeding at very competitive prices. They're really the ones to watch in the L alliance.
I have the 105 1.4 and it's a great lens that is quite easily hand hold-able despite what you may have read. That's what IBIS is for ;D
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Interesting interview with Sigma:
https://www.dpreview.com/interviews/7487852065/cp-2019-sigma-interview-optical-design-is-always-a-battle-with-the-design-constraints
Yesterday I saw the 40mm lens tested on a French magazine, it got 40/40 on the optical quality department. So it must be good:)
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It appears to make good lenses it is easier to make them big than small...
Yes. So my route was Sony a7rii, Leica M lenses (where you need the KoloriVision Ultra Thin coverglass swap to match their M9 thin glass design target). I prefer manual focus.
BTW & OT, relating to manual focus like Leica M glass, with Topaz's AI Sharpen program the f/11 image where the infinity mark is rotated to the f/8 DOF mark, the image is as good at "infinity" as the f/8 image when it is focused on the target and also put through Topaz AI Sharpen -- that is, as good as it gets. (I may not even need my usual dual-focus stacking procedure any more. Progress! Good work Topaz!)
Paul
www.PaulRoark.com