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The Carl Zeiss Planar 50mm f /0.7 is one of the largest relative aperture lenses in the history of photography. [1] The lens was designed and made specifically for the NASA Apollo lunar program to capture the far side of the Moon in 1966. [2] [3] [better source needed] [4] Stanley Kubrick used these lenses when shooting his film Barry Lyndon ...
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The advent of the Biogon opened the way to more extreme wide-angle lenses. Bertele continued to develop his design, patenting an asymmetric wide-angle lens in 1952 that covered an astonishing 120° angle of view "and beyond, practically distortion free", by adding a strong negative meniscus front element to the Biogon design, showing influences from earlier fisheye lens designs, including the ...
First workshop of Carl Zeiss in the center of Jena, c. 1847 Carl Zeiss Jena (1910) One of the Stasi's cameras with the special SO-3.5.1 (5/17mm) lens developed by Carl Zeiss, a so-called "needle eye lens", for shooting through keyholes or holes down to 1 mm in diameter 2 historical lenses of Carl Zeiss, Nr. 145077 and Nr. 145078, Tessar 1:4,5 F=5,5cm DRP 142294 (produced before 1910) Carl ...
Topogon-design lens and auxiliary viewfinder for the Mamiya Press line of cameras. Goerz was merged into the Zeiss Ikon company in 1926. [9] An independent branch of Goerz in America, which had been established in 1895, licensed the Topogon design to Bausch & Lomb, who produced it as the Metrogon for the United States, citing the same US patent as the Topogon.
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The Zeiss Planar is a photographic lens designed by Paul Rudolph at Carl Zeiss in 1896. Rudolph's original was a six-element symmetrical double Gauss lens design.. While very sharp, early versions of the lens suffered from flare due to its many air-to-glass surfaces.
A zoom lens derivative of the Sonnar, the Vario-Sonnar also exists, in which a number of lens groups are replaced with floating pairs of lens groups. The Vario-Sonnar is a Carl Zeiss photographic lens design named in relation to the Zeiss Sonnar. This lens type has a variable focal length which can replace a series of lenses for a certain ...