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The Leica Q2 is a full-frame fixed-lens camera introduced in 2019. [2] [3] [4] It was succeeded by the Leica Q3 in 2023. The Q2 itself succeeded the original Leica Q and Leica Q-P. The Q2 has a stabilized 28 mm f/1.7 Summilux lens with digital crop modes corresponding to 35 mm equivalent focal lengths of 35, 50, and 75 mm.
Leica Q2. Leica Q (Type 116) compact full frame camera with a Summilux 28 mm f /1.7 ASPH lens was officially announced on June 10, 2015. [27] Its successor, the Leica Q2 with a 47.3 Megapixel full frame sensor, was launched in March 2019. In November 2020, the company released a monochrome version of the camera, the Q2 Monochrom, using a sensor ...
The Leica Q-P was announced on 6 November 2018. The Q-P is an update to the original Q but without the Leica's red dot, instead it has the Leica script on the top. The features and technical specifications are similar to the Q, except for a quieter shutter and an improved on/off switch.
Another result of using a wide-angle lens is a greater apparent perspective distortion when the camera is not aligned perpendicularly to the subject: parallel lines converge at the same rate as with a normal lens, but converge more due to the wider total field. For example, buildings appear to be falling backwards much more severely when the ...
Leica Camera AG (/ ˈ l aɪ k ə /) is a German company that manufactures cameras, optical lenses, photographic lenses, binoculars, and rifle scopes.The company was founded by Ernst Leitz in 1869 (Ernst Leitz Wetzlar), in Wetzlar, Germany.
The Q3 has a stabilized 28 mm f / 1.7 Summilux lens with digital crop modes corresponding to 35 mm equivalent focal lengths of 35, 50, 75, and 90 mm. The Q3 features a 60-megapixel CMOS full-frame sensor, measuring 36 x 24 mm — the same resolution and perhaps the same sensor found in the Leica M11 and the Sony α7R V. [3]
Minolta offered the 35mm f / 2.8 Shift CA lens for its manual focus SR-mount cameras in the 1970s and 1980s. The lens was unique among perspective-control lenses in that, rather than offering a combination of tilt-and-shift, Minolta designed the lens with variable field curvature, which could make the field of focus either convex or concave ...
The Hektor is a photographic lens design manufactured by Leica Camera. [1] The first "fast" lens available for the Leica I(A) was the Hektor 50mm f/2,5. Later, the design was adapted for use as a long portrait lens, available first in a 73mm f/1.9 and 135mm f/4,5 screw-mount version and later in a 125mm f/2,5 bayonet-mount version.