I just bought this lens on a whim. Can't find any hard info. While I am waiting for it to arrive, does anyone know what kind of image circle I can expect?
Thanks,
Michael
I just bought this lens on a whim. Can't find any hard info. While I am waiting for it to arrive, does anyone know what kind of image circle I can expect?
Thanks,
Michael
probably an early (1930s?) enlarging lens. That's a semi-educated guess based on EK's other nomenclature.
Thanks Mark. Yes, it's old; 3 digit serial no. But...what about image circle? Or design? Any ideas? If it's an enlarging lens, I'm probably okay to use it as a taking lens. But if it's a cine lens....??
simple achromat is pretty decent so
in these times probably a waste of money as you could get for equal money a lens better at whatever you wish to do with this one
I believe the lens was sold as part (or an option) of the Eastman Projection Printer package, starting about 1920.
Follow this Google link http://books.google.com/books?id=B40...mat%22&f=false
to read a long ad-vertorial on this lens in 1920
Dan
Antique & Classic Camera Blog
www.antiquecameras.net/blog.html
is that with shipping? lol
well if you have to have a 10 inch lens and only a 10 inch lens
i dunno
im no available lens catalogue
a process lens 240mm
much better than this lens will be
some no name RR
either way $6 or $6 plus shipping could have went towards something else
it's your $6
I like to find cheap too but i dont buy projection anastigmats
i just bought a jml 305 in immaculate condition
no efl even written on it, no mouting holes drilled in flange, scratch one
$24 shipped, i think
and that guy sent along with it about 8 "junk" enlarging lenses but also an 80mm componon -nonS not that i need it
a 210 jml in better shape if possible maybe $30 shipped
all im wondering is
how cheap ARE you?
but then i feel bad about unloved barn cats, too
pretty darn cheap--enough to fork out $8.60 including shipping. But I also scored a 240mm Claron G in a barrel in another buy, and I've got a cheap tominon lens in a cheap copal shutter that I can use for the Claron G. So, I have to conclude I'm both cheap and compulsive. Now to start looking for a pair of 270mm cells....
seriously, though, the eastman lens is a process lens. Although it will be uncoated, I'm not sure why it wouldn't perform as well as any other process lens. I've read in the archives that the Blue Dot Dagor (Trigor) is an achromat and was marketed as a graphic arts lens, and it is pretty highly regarded for its sharpness, so the achromat designation by itself doesn't seem to indicate a lens is inferior. We'll see.
When a camera lens is called an "achromat", it usually means two pieces of glass which will focus two colors of light onto the same plane. Achromats were found in cheap cameras or were used for special purposes such as soft focus use. While more complex lenses are also corrected for more than one color of light, that's just taken for granted.
As for how well any particular enlarging lens will work at taking distances, try it is the only way to find out unless you come across someone who has used it.
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