Joe Kotroczo <> wrote:
>On 08/11/2012 00:48, Anthony Polson wrote:
>
>(...)
>>"a lens that gives its
>> sharpest results when wide open".
>>
>> Only Leica makes lenses that do that,
>
>That's a ridiculous claim.
>
><http://www.cookeoptics.co.uk/>
>and
><http://lenses.zeiss.com/camera-lenses/carl-zeiss-camera-lenses/cine_lenses.html>
>would be 2 examples of lens manufacturers other than Leica that are
>sharp wide open.
>
>And I have a hunch that these qualify as well:
><http://www.canon.co.uk/For_Home/Product_Finder/Digital_Cinema/Cine_Lenses/>
><http://www.fujifilm.com/products/optical_devices/cine/>
With respect, I believe you have missed the point here.
First, I was talking about still photography, not cine. I have no
interest in, or specialist knowledge of, the latter. Neither is it
on-topic for this newsgroup.
Second, I was not talking about lenses that are merely *sharp* wide
open but lenses that give *their sharpest results* when used wide
open. There is a difference.
Perhaps, given the confusion I appear to have caused, I should have
stayed with Rich's term "diffraction limited".