Among my ancient-history film lenses picked up last week, I ended up getting two 'Chinon' lenses when picking up the Konica stuff. ; It was a throw-in deal, and not something i was necessarily looking to purchase, but the lenses looked in fine shape, and despite not knowing much about the brand, I knew they were Pentax K-mount lenses, and I already had a K-mount adapter for my NEX. ; So I decided for the money I was spending, getting 6 lenses and assorted other goods for $100, it was a no-lose situation. ; Noone online seemed to know too much about Chinon, but optically they looked in amazing shape...so this weekend I decided that the 135mm F2.8 would be a good backup lens to bring on the NEX to compliment my DSLR with 300mm prime - the 135mm could kick in and cover the closer stuff, and I'd see how sharp or clean the lens was (or wasn't). ; Good news: the lens is sharp enough to cut glass! ; Gorgeous contrast and color for a 37 year old lens too, with nice smooth OOF blur. ; Manual focus and aperture only, which in this case I stuck on F8 as it was good daylight conditions. ; A few shots to demonstrate the old lens' abilities:
First, a flower:
An anhinga...so sharp you can cut yourself!:
Cormorant hanging out on a rail:
Of the 6 lenses I've now tested out, 5 are unbelievably sharp and can use every bit of the APS-C sensor's resolution...one more needs a slight tune up, which will be my next cleaning project. ; All in all, if I were to even leave that last lens out of the equation, I've paid $20 per lens for 5 extraordinarily sharp and solid old lenses!
First, a flower:

An anhinga...so sharp you can cut yourself!:

Cormorant hanging out on a rail:

Of the 6 lenses I've now tested out, 5 are unbelievably sharp and can use every bit of the APS-C sensor's resolution...one more needs a slight tune up, which will be my next cleaning project. ; All in all, if I were to even leave that last lens out of the equation, I've paid $20 per lens for 5 extraordinarily sharp and solid old lenses!
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