Author: | | Senior Member Registered: December, 2010 Location: Sydney, Australia Posts: 141 1 user found this helpful | Review Date: December 15, 2010 | Recommended | Price: $100.00
| Rating: 9 |
Pros: | German design and quality | Cons: | M42, need Pentax Adapter, a bit slow ...... | | A wonderful 50mm Prime lens. Not super fast at F2.8 but a happy performer outdoors. This lens will not focus to infinity with your standard cheap and cheerful Chinese adapters. So you will need to splash out on a Pentax adapter.
Quite light, but not as compact as other similar SMC-Pentax style lenses. Like all manual lenses this one has qualities all its own. Full focus travel is 225 degrees from infinity to 35cm. The aperture ring and focus are "silky smooth" on my copy .........Lots of fun to take out and play. Not super fast but capable of some nice shots.
Can be very sharp stoppered down. I enjoy the 'quiet nature' of this lens, quality glass and a very good performer.
Recommended........go and get one.......!................. | | | | | Junior Member Registered: June, 2010 Location: Franeker Posts: 34 | Review Date: March 22, 2011 | Recommended | Price: $40.00
| Rating: 8 |
Pros: | Nice bokeh, light and compact, sharp, min. focus distance of only 1,2 feet | Cons: | rather slow; buildquality not as good as M- or K- series lenses | | Certainly a nice lens and useful. However, for my taste, 2,8 is not fast enough while the depth of field is sometimes too large. I like it when being able to have just a tiny amount of sharpness present in a picture. Otherwise the lens performs very well and I do like the "look" of the bokeh. Buildquality is OK; just not as solid as the M- or K- series lenses from Pentax. No ca problems, just the usual lack of contrast when taking pictures directly in sunlight.
My copy came with a Practica camera and it says on the lens: "T 2,8/50 aus Jena DDR". Must be the same lens, but then made for Practica.
| | | | Inactive Account Registered: April, 2011 Location: near Berlin Posts: 9 1 user found this helpful | Review Date: January 24, 2012 | Recommended | Price: None indicated
| Rating: 9 |
Pros: | sharp, close focus distance, weight and size, bokeh wide open | Cons: | bokeh when stopped down | | This lens is a bit special. I use it most time when I take b/w-photos. I don't know why, but it is my b/w-lens. The IQ is fine, just the bokeh is a bit nervous when you stop down maybe caused by the just 5 aperture blades. Wide open it is perfect. The handling is fine although not as good as older Pentax-lenses. Close-ups are also possible. 0.35m are a nice range to handle with. A nice lens for just a few money!
Paul
| | | | Inactive Account Registered: October, 2011 Location: London, UK. Posts: 19 | Review Date: February 26, 2012 | Not Recommended | Price: $19.00
| Rating: 1 |
Pros: | Fairly compact and lightweight | Cons: | Not very sharp | | Avoid this lens like the plague! The worst 50mm lens I've every used, and I've tried dozens. You can get much better lenses for less money.
| | | | | Veteran Member Registered: February, 2012 Location: Fredericton, New Brunswick Posts: 632 1 user found this helpful | Review Date: April 30, 2012 | Recommended | Price: None indicated
| Rating: 10 |
Pros: | Sharp, Lightweight | Cons: | Tough to Focus, Feels a tad flimsy | | Sharp as you'd expect from a Zeiss - Has a pleasant(To me) bokeh when stopped down. Makes decent Faux Macro shots due to close up capabilities.(.35m)
A->M switch is easy to shift(Accidentally), and if it's mid-way, it will not stop down fully.
Great for a value 50 - Though a bit slow.
| | | | Pentaxian Registered: April, 2011 Location: Lost in translation ... Posts: 18,076 2 users found this helpful | Review Date: May 11, 2012 | Recommended | Price: None indicated
| Rating: 8 |
Pros: | Lightweight, nice size & feel, close focus, simple to fix ... | Cons: | Not that sharp, but OK ... only f2.8 | | Bonjour,
I picked up a copy of this lens at the April 2012 swap meet in Montamisé, France, for about three bucks ... since it was with oily, jammed blades and once been disassembled with the rear element retaining ring practically butchered yet unopened. Someone had tried and failed to fix it ... thus, my challenge (enter "Mission Impossible" music)!
I luckily got the rear ring off (barely) and had a heck of a time getting the front one off, too. Once apart, it took me a few hours to clean and re-assemble it. Unfortunately, I could not save the auto pin mechanism, so it's off and in a baggie now. Below are some images of this lens, and you can see on the rear the state of the retaining ring and the empty screw holes for the former auto mechanism.
Here's a link on how to service this lens : http://oomz.net/tessar/
Initial testing shows that this copy is not too bad despite its rough treatment and abuse. Definitely does NOT deserve a "1" rating ... just because it's one's "worst 50" and should be "avoided like the plague", does not make for a reasonable review, and Adam should remove crummy appraisals like this IMHO.
From what I seen thus far, I will rate it in as a "7" ... which may improve as I use it more and more ... time will tell. [ Edit: I've up the grade for this lens to "8" ] Allez et bon courage, John le Frog | | | | Site Supporter Registered: April, 2011 Location: Copenhagen Posts: 510 2 users found this helpful | Review Date: August 10, 2012 | Recommended | Price: $25.00
| Rating: 10 |
Pros: | very sharp, 12 iris blades, preset aperture, huge throw | Cons: | needs adapter | | There are many versions of this lens and apparently of very different quality.
I have the 1954 aluminium model (got it from ebay.de sitting on a Praktica F.X3 for a pittance equal to ca. 50US) with the Carl Zeiss T coating and 12 iris blades preset aperture.
Here is a photo of it with a Pentax M42 to K adapter mounted:
The lens is extremely small and lightweight at 110g L45mm and W50mm. It has a 46mm. filter thread.
The focus throw is very wide, especially in the close-up end with high precision movement from 0.5 to 1 meter.
The build quality is outstanding and the lens is working perfectly (58 years after production!), everything operating smoothly.
I am still just testing it, but I am finding the results very satisfactory. The later models are reviewed as not to sharp, and on the contrary to this, I find this early model very sharp indeed. The T coating is also very impressive (seems fully developed). The preset aperture gives full control of the depth of field and the lens has a very attractive soft bokeh without apparent color aberations. The preset should also be very usefull in video photography enabling floating shift of field depth.
Here is a 100% crop of a bee hovering a short moment above some crocus flowers:
Here is the complete photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/32108329@N08/7004052227/lightbox/
and more shots of the lens etc. here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/32108329@N08/sets/72157629487107294/with/7004052227/
My first impressions with this lens is great and I expect very great results from it in the future. Being a vintage, manual, preset lens I can still only say ‘this is a tenner‘ even if it lacks some features of our day.
| | | | Veteran Member Registered: July, 2007 Location: North West UK Posts: 390 1 user found this helpful | Review Date: November 14, 2012 | Recommended | Price: None indicated
| Rating: 9 |
Pros: | Contrast, Sharp, CA control, Colour rendition | Cons: | not fast for a "fifty", movement of lens when focusing, M42 only | Sharpness: 10
Aberrations: 10
Bokeh: 10
Handling: 8
Value: 10
| | I have had this lens since I was 16 when I got a Praktica SLR with this lens.
Recently I have had a play with it on a K-5 for fun!
Well, what can I say, this lens is excellent! It is sharp, the colour rendition is superb and so contrasty too. CA? None that I noticed, probably being based on the legend that is the Tessar, and coatings to counter accordingly.
Downsides, well It is East German, so build is not the best, the focus ring is not smooth and the lens does seem to to move a bit when you focus, but if you understand this, then not a problem.
Also, it is a 50mm, so F2.8 is not fast, but again, use it for applications where speed is not required, or you already have a fast fifty, then it is worth having. Plus you can get these for the price of a beer!
Would I recommend? YES! It is a tessar after all and a sharp one at that.
Edit - March 2022.
I thought I would give an update on this lens, especially since I have had the K-1 for many years. Is it still good on a 36MP camera? Well yes! Lovely colours and contrast. Nice bokeh as well. Just shows that a good design is that. The down side is the very sticky grease that is normal for East German optics. Do not expect a smooth focus that the Takumars are renowned for. But having said that, these are very cheap and worth having.
| | | | Veteran Member Registered: April, 2012 Location: Melbs Posts: 1,237 1 user found this helpful | Review Date: November 16, 2012 | Recommended | Price: $10.00
| Rating: 10 |
Pros: | Cheap, and what a Work Horse! | Cons: | Stigma | |
COLOUR!
I think every one should have one of these. The quickly forgotten standard in photography. This Humble design stretches back at least to the 1930's where countless examples exist in different forms, formats, mounts.
if anything, get this as a start to get away from kit zooms. :P
It densest really matter which version you get they all share the same formula. If your keen hunt down a late 50's all metal one. They look the hotness and just feel magical
I have three, no four, wait.. and enjoy taking them out for their quirks and quirks alone.. You know when your partner does something particularly annoying where you just but help find your self smiling at the thought that if this was any other person, you would have punched them in the arm by now? Its kinda the same relationship I have with my ol' Tessars.
If nothing else, one of these will start an obsession with old camera gear. Consider it a gateway drug. It's an excellent way to introduce yourself to manual focus if by sad chance you haven't already.
Sharp, no issues with CA, nor barrel distortions etc etc, focuses down to 30 odd cm, easy to work under the hod with, cheap, reliable, f2.8 is fast enough for us today with our silly cameras and iso above 1600's. it really really really is. As for whether f2.8 is shallow enough..
That's the corner of a push lawn mower. I count maybe 1cm max before it blurs. And that's all at f2.8 mind you. how much shallower do you want?
Again the clothes line, that orange and blue mush just left of centre are some more pegs. The orange peg to the left of the focus point is 2-3cm away.
So it's fast enough on our digital bodies, f2.8 is shallow enough, Colours look amazing (oh they are all straight out of camera by the way) and you can pick them up for less then your lunch.
Love it.
Oh, I nearly forgot, for you lads who shoot video. The later model ones "pictured above" have a little ball bearing that clicks along when you change f-stops. You can, (like I have) loose it and then it changes f-stop like a preset lens, quietly and smoothly. BAM!
| | | | New Member Registered: July, 2013 Posts: 3 2 users found this helpful | Review Date: July 31, 2013 | Recommended | Price: $15.00
| Rating: 9 |
Pros: | Price,build quality,resolution,bokeh | Cons: | | | Very good lens for normal motives and thanks to the 35 cm min distance,
also for flowers ao.
I like the bokeh,but you have to work the motive to let it shine due to the f/2,8. | | | | Junior Member Registered: August, 2009 Location: Lexington, KY Posts: 30 | Review Date: April 30, 2014 | Recommended | Price: $19.00
| Rating: 8 |
Pros: | Tessar, close focus, says Zeiss on it | Cons: | Slow | Sharpness: 9
Aberrations: 5
Bokeh: 8
Handling: 6
Value: 8
Camera Used: Sony A7
| | Well, I've got over 130 lenses... but this is my first that says Zeiss on it. In fairness, I have a bunch of USSR Zeiss copies, but I was curious to see if a lens that said Zeiss on it actually was special in any way... and finally I found one cheap enough to try. My copy is cosmetically excellent, but had a non-functional iris -- which I was able to clean and fix in less than an hour. Unfortunately, I'm not the first person to open this lens, and I think it's missing the tiny ball bearing that lets the aperture ring bump between stops more smoothly. Focus is smooth but too tight, so that it sometimes prefers to unscrew the M42 mount rather than focus. Build is solid, clean, and simple to work on; it is an excellent mechanical design, but not as smoothly implemented as one might hope for.
This lens is quite sharp in the center even wide open, and the edges aren't too bad. The lens doesn't generate wild flare patterns, but drops overall contrast when it flares. There seems to be a fair degree of coma off-axis, making point light sources look like directional ink blots, but without being too objectionable for most scenes. It gets sharper and cleaner when stopped down, especially off axis. Bokeh are, well, Tessar bokeh. They're generally quite pleasing with a soft edge, but they also have internal structure that can look unpleasant.
Overall, it's quite different from most fast 50s. While f/2.8 is slow, it's actually pretty fast for a Tessar, and there is plenty of defocus given the close focus. It feels a little more "retro" than my other fast 50s without being riddled with distracting image quality problems. Really reminds me of old folding film cameras, which often had normal Tessars too. I certainly can't complain for the $19 I paid....
Update, August 2020: Well, I now have over 200 lenses, but I finally got around to doing a little CLA on this lens and testing it on my A7RII. It's a surprisingly pleasant little lens now that focus isn't so stiff, but wide-open sharpness isn't really up to 42MP FF. It can focus pleasantly close and is generally well behaved. Here's a sample image from it:
Oh, it's also worth noting mine doesn't look anything like the others here, but looks just like the one in the overview of this lens. It's from the last few years of production in the early 1970s. Here it is on my A6500: | | | | Pentaxian Registered: September, 2013 Location: Toronto Posts: 2,074 2 users found this helpful | Review Date: June 12, 2014 | Recommended | Price: $50.00
| Rating: 7 |
Pros: | Solid build, wonderful many-bladed aperture (on preset versions) | Cons: | Slow, rear element hits mirror on some full-frame SLRs | Sharpness: 8
Bokeh: 7
Handling: 7
Value: 6
Camera Used: K20D
| | My copy is the silver preset. Non "red T" version: Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar 2.8/50 by Andrew, on Flickr
(I also owned the 80s black plastic version with A/M switch, and would rate it lower. Quality control was notably inconsistent during that period of production.)
An older, slower 50mm lens. Build quality is solid. Bokeh is nothing to write home about, but you're never going to complain that it's distracting either. Handling is... OK.
Word of warning though, some of the older Tessars can cause problems on 35mm cameras. The mirror on my Spotmatic clears the rear element on the way up, but hits it on the return.
Samples: Green Hood by Andrew, on Flickr Chair Cat Moon by Andrew, on Flickr Late Rose by Andrew, on Flickr On the Ground by Andrew, on Flickr
| | | | New Member Registered: November, 2013 Posts: 14 2 users found this helpful | Review Date: September 2, 2014 | Recommended | Price: $10.00
| Rating: 10 |
Pros: | really extremely sharp, stopped down to f 8 / piqué extrème à f 8 | Cons: | a few flare wide open / un peu de flou à diaphragme ouvert | Sharpness: 10
Aberrations: 9
Bokeh: 8
Handling: 9
Value: 10
Camera Used: k-5. k-s1,spotmatic,k-x.k200.k100,fuji x-e1
| | The German so called "eagles eye" in 4/3 scheme is an old achromatic "triplet of Cook" construction of CARL ZEISS JENA, but very effective. / cet objectif - nommé oeil d'un aigle - a une lentille achromatique "triplet COOK" et un schéma 4/3 très simple, mais effectif !
I've got 3 items of this lens: one zebra M42, one alu exa and one with aperture automatic in zebra design exa mount, too./ j'ai acheté 3 exemplaires de cet objectif:
1x M42 Zébra
1x Exa/Exakta mount alu
1x dto. Zébra
You can use it for close-ups with an achromate either in front or on back side between lens and SLR. This optical system will change to 6/4. results are really very nice and sharp, afterwards. So you don't need an additional macro lens, which is very expensive. (ok by this way you'll miss the floating macro tube until 1:1,perhaps) But you'll get phantastic macros, nevertheless. / Vous pouvez utiliser cet objectif net aussi comme lentille macro - soit avec un achromat devant, soit en arrière pour épargner und objectif macro spéciel très cher. Cela vous rendra une construction optique de 6/4 éléments d'une très haute netteté.
O/+ wide ope some CAs visible, disappearing at f 8 / diaphragme fermé à f8 ne plus de ACs visibles
++ nice color rendition / couleurs jolies
++ identic sharpness in the edges as in the center - this is very rare / même netteté au centre et dans les coins - cela est peu fréquent !
++ wide open still not so sharp, but f 8-11 will give you an excellent sharpness up to the edges. And the contrast will increase enormously. 80 LP = 160 lines / lignes / mm = 2.650 lines / lignes (APS-C) / piqué excellent avec diaphragme fermé à f 8-11.
This is a semi-professional value / c'est une valeur sémi-professionelle ! | | | | New Member Registered: May, 2015 Location: Setúbal (near Lisbon) Posts: 5 5 users found this helpful | Review Date: June 14, 2015 | Recommended | Price: $30.00
| Rating: 10 |
Pros: | Sharpness and marvelous colors | Cons: | none | Sharpness: 10
Aberrations: 10
Bokeh: 10
Handling: 10
Value: 10
Camera Used: Canon 5Dii, Pentax K20D and Lumix G1
| | Maybe there are lenses the same quality but better I do not believe. I have 2 zebras, 2 silvers (normal and small) and 2 blacks.
Pentax K20D + Carl Zeiss 50mm 2.8 (Zebra)
Canon 5Dii + Carl Zeiss 50mm 2.8 (Zebra)
Lumix G1 + Carl Zeiss 50mm 2.8 (Zebra)
In chromatic aberrations compared with my canon 50mm 1.4
In distortion compared with my canon 50mm 1.4
In sharpness compared with my canon 50mm 1.4 | | | | Site Supporter Registered: September, 2013 Location: Cuenca Posts: 621 1 user found this helpful | Review Date: May 25, 2017 | Recommended | Price: $75.00
| Rating: 10 |
Pros: | sharp, great color, good contrast contributing to dimensionality, je ne sais quoi | Cons: | none | Sharpness: 9
Aberrations: 9
Bokeh: 9
Handling: 9
Value: 10
Camera Used: Sony Alpha a850
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I would expect copy variation with a lens that has been produced for so many years and has undergone some manufacturing changes in that time. I was fortunate to get an excellent copy made between 1955 and 1958. My copy is silver, tiny (40.5mm filter thread), has twelve aperture blades, some lens coating but not the "T" multicoating, and focusing and aperture change that feel better than with a Takumar (!). If the Takumar is smooth, this lens is silky. I expect this lens to become a favorite, hopefully on par with my favorite lens of all time, an early 60's uncoated Tessar on a fixed lens Zeiss Ikon Contessa LK camera. What that lens did with color and light was magical.
The view of the city was taken focused at infinity @f9, the picture of the pen was taken @f2.8 and at minimum focus distance (It was cropped.). The picture of the nib is a detail of the pen shot.
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