wbulte
Active Member
I think, in general, that people tend to be overly concerned about distortion.
After all it is about the images produced, not about MTF curves etc, important as they might be for development of lenses and objective comparison between lenses.
Obviously for specialist situations, say architecture, distortion is a whole lot more important than for, say, landscape work.
As Paul can attest, I have enlargements on my walls at home of architectural subjects, taken with the 40FLE and C50. Neither of them have distortion to the extent that should worry anybody. Really, a 40FLE is not some Coke-bottom lens, I have the images to prove my point, also from architecture.
If you want almost distortion-less images go and buy a pure symmetrically built Schneider Super-Angulon. Then put it on a 8x10" technical camera. You will be stunned by the results. Added bonus: full front and back movements will allow you to correct perspective. No more 'tombstone' church towers and whatnot. And no grain either.
Wilko
After all it is about the images produced, not about MTF curves etc, important as they might be for development of lenses and objective comparison between lenses.
Obviously for specialist situations, say architecture, distortion is a whole lot more important than for, say, landscape work.
As Paul can attest, I have enlargements on my walls at home of architectural subjects, taken with the 40FLE and C50. Neither of them have distortion to the extent that should worry anybody. Really, a 40FLE is not some Coke-bottom lens, I have the images to prove my point, also from architecture.
If you want almost distortion-less images go and buy a pure symmetrically built Schneider Super-Angulon. Then put it on a 8x10" technical camera. You will be stunned by the results. Added bonus: full front and back movements will allow you to correct perspective. No more 'tombstone' church towers and whatnot. And no grain either.
Wilko