I don´t know if you have tried, but if you use a high precision focusing screen (I use the Ec-S), nailing focus is not that difficult, even in quite poor light. Close head shots wide open are difficult both with and without AF, if the subject is moving. But the way I shoot portraits, it works quite well and my keeper rates are high. But on close portraits I often use at least f2.0, because I find the f1.4/f1.2 DOF to be too shallow. You´ll just get an eye (maybe not even the whole eye) in focus. It makes interesting images now and then, but not very often.talicoa said:So are you saying that a well practiced manual focusing photographer could use this lens as an effective portrait lens in close quarters wide open? What do you think the keeper rate would be hand held? What percentage of those keepers would use to the fullest extent this very expensive glass? I think it would be disappointingly low.
I have lots of out of focus f1.2 examples from my 85/1.2L II, but unfortunately, I have no shots to show from a manually focused 85mm (yet ...).
There are lots to be said about DxO, but the statement you refer to works for me. I am drooling over this lens, but preorder is not open here in Norway yet, so I still have time to sober up and be sensible.
I find it more difficult to figure out how they sum up their test results and settle on a final score for a lens. Based on the various numbers they published for the Zeiss lenses (on Nikon body), how could the Zeiss 135/2 get a lower overall score than the two Otus lenses? Sharpness is higher, Transmission is the same (relative to wide open aperture), distortion is lower, vignetting is lower and CA is less.
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