I just got back from my court appearance, and I will finish my response to this post:
However, I don’t agree about the quality of the Zeiss APO Sonnar 135 and still depend on it for certain kinds of shots that I want crystal clear. I have no trouble with the colors, myself. I include a Zeiss 135mm shots one with the whole shot and a crop. Now, I like this look, myself.
What you don't realize is the image you posted up top (2nd) typifies
why the Zeiss got sold, twice, and that is because ...
when it comes to the details of the insects themselves, the Zeiss fumbles every time.
The first image (the FULL image on top, with all the water, the trees, etc.) is one of my favorites from you, as I said, it is truly beautiful
However,
the crop (just the beetles themselves) is ... meh, something that I would never accept as a macro image of an insect.
The Zeiss only has a 1:4 reproduction ratio, whereas the CV has a 1:1 ratio.
This is a massive difference!More than just 'on paper' ... it truly affects the Zeiss' application potential (even you said, in your book, "It's a hard lens to use.")
IMO, the CV 125 could have taken just as good an image of "the whole" as your Zeiss did ... but the CV would have taken
a 10x better image of the insects themselves. That's the point you're not truly acknowledging.
Thus, as I said, Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo-Macro can do
anything the Zeiss 135 f/2 Apo Sonnar can do (as a telephoto) ... but it can also achieve a level of perfection, up close, that the Zeiss never will.
I know you've seen this one of mine before, as I have yours, but it underscores my point:
Honey Bee by
John A. Koerner II, on Flickr
The Zeiss could never take an image of a bee like that, it would literally be impossible.
That bee is only about 10mm. It's plenty sharp with the CV 125, where it needs to be, totally realistic colors, and fine bokeh elsewhere.
Basic math will help understand
why the Zeiss could never take an image like this.
Taken @ 1:1, a 10mm bee fills about 1/3rd the 36mm frame, using the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo. (
That's close to 30% of the frame.)
Taken @ 1:4, that 10mm bee only fills 1/14th the the 36mm frame, using the Zeiss 135mm f/2 Apo. (
That's a tiny 7% of the frame.)
There's no way you could crop-in that far and retain image quality. And that's it in a nutshell:
You have to crop
so far in with the Zeiss, you render almost any arthropod image useless.
The ONLY time the Zeiss 135 Apo can hold a candle to the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo, is if you're using the entire frame.
And, even here, when used as a telephoto, the CV 125 holds its own, though the Zeiss does have a sharpness edge.
For macro though? The Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo blows the Zeiss out of the water.
Any time you crop-in with the Zeiss,
the CV 125 does not have to. And that's the difference: it wins every time.
If you want to know where the mother of the CV-125 can be found, it is in the Leica 100mm APO-Macro Elmarit-R, which I had to convert the mount for Nikon, but it is even more lovely than the CV-125 and as something like a 720-degree focus throw. It too can travel, but is a little more fussy than the CV-125.
I don't have first-hand experience with this lens, but I trust your love for it is well-placed
Everything I have read is (yes) the Leica renders wonderfully ... but it doesn't come in Nikon mount ... and isn't all that sharp ... and it only has a 1:2 reproduction ratio, not 1:1.
The CV 125 therefore remains the more useful field tool (imo), as a result.
I dearly love the CV-125 as you know Jack, because I used to tell you about it when you were loving the Sigma 180 Macro. I find that I go through cycles of using the CV-125. I use it a bunch and then get tired of its too-soft approach and yearn to clear all that up for a while, if you understand me. Yes, it is sharp enough, but there is a softness or lack-of-crisp that is what endears me to it, but also which I get tired of. And it’s not my copy, because I have several of them.
Do you know what I’m talking about?
Probably the D810 and the Zeiss APO Sonnar 135mm
We share the love of the CV 125, no doubt. [BTW, the 300 f/2.8 VR II (a finer optic than any of these) replaced the Sigma 180.]
But let's condense this down to macro, only, and the CV 125 vs. the Zeiss.
There are 2 main reason why we disagree on the Zeiss:
1) You shoot large flowers, whereas I shoot mostly wildlife. This means you get to use THE WHOLE SENSOR with your Zeiss ... so you got to enjoy its ONLY advantage: sharpness.
Whereas I am more interested in the arthropods, which means the Zeiss is an
impediment, not a tool, in achieving great detail.
2) You shoot wide-open, whereas I shoot macro @ f/4.
At f/4 the CV 125 is easily as sharp as the Zeiss, and if there's a difference, it's indiscernible.
Here is an example to show why the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo is superior to the Zeiss 135 f/2 Apo Sonnar as a macro.
Below is the same male Arizona Mantid (Stagmomantis limbata), the first taken with the Zeiss, the second with the CV 125:
Arizona Mantid ♂,
taken with Zeiss 135 f/2 Apo by
John A. Koerner II, on Flickr
Remember, a 1:4 lens means that it will only fit 144mm (5.7 inches) onto a 36mm sensor. Therefore, even with a 2.5" mantid, I had to crop-in more than half to get this framing with the Zeiss.The Zeiss image quality, above, is much noisier due to the crop.
By contrast,
the 1:1 Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo macro, I can fit 36mm (1.4 inches) onto a 36mm sensor. Therefore, I had to step back, and I legitimately filled my frame with the same mantis:
Arizona Mantid ♂,
taken with Voigtländer 125 f/2.5 Apo by
John A. Koerner II, on Flickr
For this reason, the detail is much greater. I made the same experiment with a female Arizona Mantid on the same bush. Females are larger, so the Zeiss did better, but I still thought the sharpness, color, and bokeh were better with the CV 125. (These are stacks of live animals, not posed dead ones, so they change positions. Still, these were taken of the same animals, on the same day, in the same comparable light.):
Arizona Mantid ♀,
taken with Zeiss 135 f/2 Apo by
John A. Koerner II, on Flickr
Arizona Mantid ♀,
taken with Voigtländer 125 f/2.5 Apo by
John A. Koerner II, on Flickr
My own stacking imperfections aside, for arthropods, the CV beats the Zeiss every time.
For larger arthropods, the Zeiss is just 'okay' ... for smaller ones, it is literally unusable.
Again, for your purposes, Michael (larger flowers, where you're using the whole frame), the Zeiss makes sense.
For my purposes, where I
never use the full frame of the Zeiss ... it demands that I crop ... the few times I took it hiking I immediately regretted not bringing the CV 125 instead.
It's very limited applications happen to suit your style of shooting ... but they sure don't suit mine ... and that's okay
Thanks for reading ...