I'm with priit. The fundamental requirement for lenses is the same
whether color or B&W. Each has to accurately reproduce the image in
full color on the surface of the film and that will require an
apochromatic lens. (red, green and blue all brought to the same focus).
You'd have to go back a long, long way to find camera lenses that were
simply achromatic (just red and blue brought to the same focus).
I would admit of the possibility that certain B&W films might have
sensitivity in the IR or UV wavelengths that might be attenuated by some
lenses and less attenuated by others. But, unless for a specifically
advertised effect, I would consider that a defect of the film in
recording something other than what I see. I'd change films.
If the B&W and color film (or sensor) all record the same range of the
spectrum then I would expect to be able to post process the color to be
able to closely mimic the B&W original.
Chuck Norcutt
priit@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
>
> On Mon, 12 Nov 2007, Wayne Harridge wrote:
>
>> Just snipped this from a photo.net forum, comments please:
>
>> The Mamiya lenses are OK for color, not so good for B&W. Get the 6x7 if
>> you can scrape up the cash. The quality difference in formats is
>> considerable. 6x7 is a wonderfully proportioned negative.
>
> <snip>
>
> I think this just reflects the poster's personal taste. He does not get
> the look he wants with Mamiya, that's pretty much his personal problem.
> Think about how many other factors can influence the tonality and contrast
> - light at the location, choice of film, exposure time, choice of
> developer, development time, print exposure time, choice of paper, print
> development time, choice of print developer, light at the viewing
> location (or substitute the digital process for the chemical print, same
> difference). Is the lens really such a big contributor there?
>
> Lenses for color photography need to be achromatic, or better yet,
> apochromatic (if you can afford it). A lens with no such correction would
> have a more diffuse look in B&W. But in any case all modern lenses (for
> SLR photography, anyway) have this correction.
>
> priit.
>
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