gdanmitchell said:[/list]
- It is difficult to make a rational judgement about a 50mm lens that costs $4000. Who knows? It might actually be the very best optical tool ever made. Or not — perhaps it is just another very fine lens that costs a lot.
When it comes to such a thing there are several factors to keep in mind:
[list type=decimal]- There is a sizable group of photo gear fans who are perhaps more enthusiastic about owning the Very Best Shiny Thing than about producing the very best photographs. This sort of urge is not unique to photography, though camera gear acquisition is one of the more obvious playgrounds for such inclinations. For these people, while the test scores (and the brand name, and the cost) matter, the real world photographic effects — beyond the theoretical — may not so much.
- Beyond the stupendous cost, the venerable name of Zeiss conjures up wonderful specialness, too — like Bentley, Bulgari, and others.
- Put these together and there is a serious danger of confirmation bias. Unless you are willing to begin by actually asking what, if anything, the emperor is actually wearing, it is all to easy to begin with assumption that having the nMe Zeiss and the price of $4k, in just must be The Very Best Thing and Worth Every Penny.
- Finally, the correlation between the greatest photographs we see and the use of stratospherically expensive optics like the Zeiss — no matter how good the test results — is pretty close to random.
mskrystalmeth said:OP..of the Review....You would get a better result of The Otus 55mm on a Camera that has High MP...ie Nikon's D810. This is where major flaws come in...when Reviewers test a high end lens on Old Dusty S 8)ensors, Canon's 6d and so on. What would of been the results if Canon Produced a Quality Sensor?
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:mskrystalmeth said:OP..of the Review....You would get a better result of The Otus 55mm on a Camera that has High MP...ie Nikon's D810. This is where major flaws come in...when Reviewers test a high end lens on Old Dusty S 8)ensors, Canon's 6d and so on. What would of been the results if Canon Produced a Quality Sensor?
http://www.dpreview.com/articles/3211770916/lens-reviews-update-test-data-for-the-zeiss-otus-1-4-55
There's some feedback on a Nikon sensor. BTW, while the 6D is far from being a high-megapixel sensor, it is also perhaps Canon's best other than the one in the 1Dx.
You can definitely see a difference with the Otus compared to other lenses (I directly compared it with the 50L, for example) on a 6D or a 5DIII. You don't buy an Otus just for the sensor/body you have right now, though, you buy it to pretty much use it the rest of your life on whatever bodies are yet to come. The Otus 85 is at the top of my personal wish list.
meywd said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:mskrystalmeth said:OP..of the Review....You would get a better result of The Otus 55mm on a Camera that has High MP...ie Nikon's D810. This is where major flaws come in...when Reviewers test a high end lens on Old Dusty S 8)ensors, Canon's 6d and so on. What would of been the results if Canon Produced a Quality Sensor?
http://www.dpreview.com/articles/3211770916/lens-reviews-update-test-data-for-the-zeiss-otus-1-4-55
There's some feedback on a Nikon sensor. BTW, while the 6D is far from being a high-megapixel sensor, it is also perhaps Canon's best other than the one in the 1Dx.
You can definitely see a difference with the Otus compared to other lenses (I directly compared it with the 50L, for example) on a 6D or a 5DIII. You don't buy an Otus just for the sensor/body you have right now, though, you buy it to pretty much use it the rest of your life on whatever bodies are yet to come. The Otus 85 is at the top of my personal wish list.
Is there a way to get a comparison between the two (85 and 55), I know the focal length difference, but I would like to know the bokeh difference between the two, just incase someday I lose my mind and decide to buy one ;D, thanks for another great review Dustin
mskrystalmeth said:OP..of the Review....You would get a better result of The Otus 55mm on a Camera that has High MP...ie Nikon's D810. This is where major flaws come in...when Reviewers test a high end lens on Old Dusty S 8)ensors, Canon's 6d and so on. What would of been the results if Canon Produced a Quality Sensor?
zlatko said:mskrystalmeth said:OP..of the Review....You would get a better result of The Otus 55mm on a Camera that has High MP...ie Nikon's D810. This is where major flaws come in...when Reviewers test a high end lens on Old Dusty S 8)ensors, Canon's 6d and so on. What would of been the results if Canon Produced a Quality Sensor?
There is a major flaw in your comment. Canon produces high quality sensors and has for a long time.
I actually made such a comparison. I made a number of images as equal as possible between the two, ref:bchernicoff said:The review makes comparisons to the 50L and the Sigma Art, but offers no comparison images.
"The Sigma 50mm f/1.4 ART series lens is somewhat better competition in terms of sharpness, and (to a lesser extent) contrast, but in overall image quality it falls short of Otus. The Sigma ART is a very nice lens, but, ironically, it isn’t nearly as “artful” as the Otus 55."
Show us. People like to judge for themselves whether the massive cost and lack of AF are worth it.
Eldar said:I actually made such a comparison. I made a number of images as equal as possible between the two, ref:
http://www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=20716.0
Be aware that all images are 4MB limited in sRGB.
Update! The images are posted in AdobeRGB, so they look like sh.. But if you open them up, they look OK. The differences between the two are rather subtle on these posted images, but are more visible on the full resolution versions. if it had not been for the notoriously unreliable AF on the Sigma, it would be a phenomenal bargain.
meywd said:zlatko said:mskrystalmeth said:OP..of the Review....You would get a better result of The Otus 55mm on a Camera that has High MP...ie Nikon's D810. This is where major flaws come in...when Reviewers test a high end lens on Old Dusty S 8)ensors, Canon's 6d and so on. What would of been the results if Canon Produced a Quality Sensor?
There is a major flaw in your comment. Canon produces high quality sensors and has for a long time.
If you are going for more detail then the 7D II has it more than d810. And why should everyone test the lens on the same body, there are already people who did that!
bchernicoff said:The review makes comparisons to the 50L and the Sigma Art, but offers no comparison images.
"The Sigma 50mm f/1.4 ART series lens is somewhat better competition in terms of sharpness, and (to a lesser extent) contrast, but in overall image quality it falls short of Otus. The Sigma ART is a very nice lens, but, ironically, it isn’t nearly as “artful” as the Otus 55."
Show us. People like to judge for themselves whether the massive cost and lack of AF are worth it.
Eldar said:I actually made such a comparison. I made a number of images as equal as possible between the two, ref:bchernicoff said:The review makes comparisons to the 50L and the Sigma Art, but offers no comparison images.
"The Sigma 50mm f/1.4 ART series lens is somewhat better competition in terms of sharpness, and (to a lesser extent) contrast, but in overall image quality it falls short of Otus. The Sigma ART is a very nice lens, but, ironically, it isn’t nearly as “artful” as the Otus 55."
Show us. People like to judge for themselves whether the massive cost and lack of AF are worth it.
http://www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=20716.0
Be aware that all images are 4MB limited in sRGB.
Update! The images are posted in AdobeRGB, so they look like sh.. But if you open them up, they look OK. The differences between the two are rather subtle on these posted images, but are more visible on the full resolution versions. if it had not been for the notoriously unreliable AF on the Sigma, it would be a phenomenal bargain.
gdanmitchell said:[/list]
- It is difficult to make a rational judgement about a 50mm lens that costs $4000. Who knows? It might actually be the very best optical tool ever made. Or not — perhaps it is just another very fine lens that costs a lot.
When it comes to such a thing there are several factors to keep in mind:
[list type=decimal]- There is a sizable group of photo gear fans who are perhaps more enthusiastic about owning the Very Best Shiny Thing than about producing the very best photographs. This sort of urge is not unique to photography, though camera gear acquisition is one of the more obvious playgrounds for such inclinations. For these people, while the test scores (and the brand name, and the cost) matter, the real world photographic effects — beyond the theoretical — may not so much.
- Beyond the stupendous cost, the venerable name of Zeiss conjures up wonderful specialness, too — like Bentley, Bulgari, and others.
- Put these together and there is a serious danger of confirmation bias. Unless you are willing to begin by actually asking what, if anything, the emperor is actually wearing, it is all to easy to begin with assumption that having the nMe Zeiss and the price of $4k, in just must be The Very Best Thing and Worth Every Penny.
- Finally, the correlation between the greatest photographs we see and the use of stratospherically expensive optics like the Zeiss — no matter how good the test results — is pretty close to random.