Elmar (lens)
The name Elmar is used by Leica to designate camera lenses of four elements.
History
[edit]The Elmar lenses originally had a maximum aperture of f/3.5. These lenses were derived from a 50 mm f/3.5 Elmax lens first produced in 1925. The name is a combination of Ernst Leitz and Max Berek.[1]
Description
[edit]Elmar lenses have a maximum aperture ranging between f/2.8 and f/4. Current Elmar lenses have a maximum aperture of f/3.8 or f/4, as in the Elmar-M 24 mm f/3.8 and Tri-Elmar-M 16-18-21 mm f/4.[1] The term Elmar is sometimes combined with: Super, Tele, APO, Macro or Vario. Leica also uses the name Elmarit for some lenses.
Market positions
[edit]Elmar lenses are comparatively slow. As a result they tend to be smaller and lighter than faster lenses of the same focal length.[1][2]
List of Elmar lenses
[edit]- For the M39 lens mount
- Elmar 35 mm f/3.5
- Elmar 50 mm f/3.5 collapsible
- Elmar 50 mm f/2.8 collapsible
- Elmar 90mm f/4
- For the Leica M mount
- Tri-Elmar-M 16-18-21 mm f/4 ASPH.
- Tri-Elmar-M 28–35–50 mm f/4 ASPH.
- Super-Elmar-M 18 mm f/3.8 ASPH.
- Super-Elmar-M 21 mm f/3.4 ASPH.
- Elmar-M 50 mm f/2.8
- Elmar-M 50 mm f/3.5 (1954-1961)
- Macro-Elmar-M 90 mm f/4
- Elmar 135 mm f/4.0
- For the Leica R mount
- Leica 15 mm f/3.5 Super-Elmar-R – 1980 (Carl Zeiss design)
- Leica 100 mm f/4.0 Macro-Elmar-R bellows version
- Leica 100 mm f/4.0 Macro-Elmar-R helical version
- Leica 180 mm f/4 Elmar-R – 1976
- Leica 21 mm–35 mm f/3.5–f/4.0 Vario-Elmar-R zoom – 2002
- Leica 28 mm–70 mm f/3.5–4.5 Vario-Elmar-R zoom
- Leica 35–70 f/4.0 Vario-Elmar-R zoom
- Leica 35–70 mm f/3.5 Vario-Elmar-R zoom (Minolta design and glass production)
- Leica 70–210 mm f/4.0 Vario-Elmar-R zoom (Minolta design and glass production)
- Leica 75–200 mm f/4.5 Vario-Elmar-R – 1976–1984 (Minolta design and glass production)
- Leica 80–200 mm f/4.5 Vario-Elmar-R zoom
- Leica 80–200 mm f/4.0 Vario-Elmar-R zoom
- Leica 105–280 mm f/4.2 Vario-Elmar-R zoom
- For the Leica S mount
- Super-Elmar-S 1:3.5/24 mm ASPH.
- TS-APO-Elmar-S 1:5.6/120 mm ASPH. (Schneider-Kreuznach design)
- Apo-Elmar-S 1:3.5/180 mm ASPH.
- Apo-Elmar-S 1:3.5/180 mm ASPH. CS
- Vario-Elmar-S 1:3.5-5.6/30–90 mm ASPH.
- For the Leica L Mount
- Super-Vario-Elmar-SL 1:3.5–4.5 / 16–35 ASPH.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Taylor, David (2014). Leica M Typ 240 Expanded Guide. United Kingdom: Ammonite Press. ISBN 978-1781450390.
- ^ "LEICA Lens Names". www.kenrockwell.com. Retrieved 2019-11-27.