GMCPhotographics said:
The "magic" with this lens is in it's light gathering capabilities. It seems to invent it's own light in dim lit scenes. I shot a wedding in the crypt of Canterbury cathedral lit only by candle light...no problems with this lens. But on bright sunny days (we do get them in the UK...honest) forget trying to shoot it wide open. You will bounce off your camera's fastest shutter speed all too easy. ND's become a must.
I'm not fussed about an IS system, if I can't shoot below 1/50th it's no use for portrait work.
While there are a lot of comparisons with the 135L, it's a very different animal. It works light levels that the 135L can't even dream of and it operates at a working distance that allows repore between photographer and client.
Well obviously a lens at f/1.2 is going to gather more light than f/2 or f/2.8. It's not magic, and it's not - as you say and I've seen in other gushing reviews - 'creating its own light'. It's just gathering more light than most lenses because it's got such a wide aperture.
GMCPhotographics said:
Many don't understand the 85mm f1.2IIL, they look at lens charts or web reviews which generally take the lens out of context and measure against a datum that this lens simply wasn't designed for. It's a bit like complaining that a fisheye, macro or a TSe is too specific or dedicated. Well...these lenses aren't designed to be versatile, they have a specific function. If you don't need optimum potential in those genres...then get a more versatile lens...it's quite simple really.
I really like my 85mm f1.2 II L and It's more than payed for it's self with portfolio's worth of great images. But it you dislike this lens then you probably don't understand it or are using out of context.
With all due respect, PBD wasn't saying the 85L is bad, but that nobody can reliably tell its images apart from other lenses at similar focal lengths and apertures. And although some have claimed they can, nobody has yet - here or to my knowledge anywhere else - proven they can.
I'm not sure why some users of this lens get so defensive (talk of 'hate' above). It's a matter of bringing some empiricism to a world of 'magic'. The 85L is an excellent lens for portraiture - that's what it was designed for. But it is not magical, nor is any other lens. If it helps people justify their purchasing decisions, well that's up to them, but when discussing a range of lenses, and comparing them, it's of no use to anyone to talk in mystical terms, or to say that anyone disagreeing simply doesn't understand. I'm pretty sure PBD understand perfectly well. I owned the 85L and it's capable of producing beautiful images. But it is just a tool for a job, there's no need for all this cultlike lyricism.
To claim that a newer 85mm lens won't have the 'magic' of the 85L is meaningless and absurd. Nobody has seen images taken with this lens yet, and even when we do, if 'magic' cannot be measured or defined, then it is irrelevant to people attempting to decide between the two.