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  2. List of Leica lenses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Leica_lenses

    Leica 60 mm Macro-Elmarit-R 1st version – 1972 – outside bayonet lens hood fitting; Leica 60 mm Macro-Elmarit-R dn2 version; Leica 75 mm f /2.0 Elcan-R code C-341 – extremely rare; Leica 80mm f /1.4 Summilux-R; Elmarit-R 135 mm. Leica 90 mm f /2.8 Elmarit-R 1st version – 1964–1996; Leica 90 mm f /2.8 Elmarit-R 2nd version – 1983

  3. Leica M mount - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leica_M_mount

    The Leica M mount is a camera lens mount introduced in 1954 with the Leica M3, and a range of lenses. It has been used on all the Leica M-series cameras and certain accessories (e.g. Visoflex reflex viewing attachment) up to the current film Leica M-A and digital Leica M11 cameras. This lens mount has also been used by Epson, Ricoh, Minolta ...

  4. List of Leica Camera models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Leica_Camera_models

    In 2014, Leica announced two updates on the series: the Leica X-E (Typ 102) featuring a 24 mm f /2.8 lens and the Leica X (Typ 113) which has a 23mm f /1.7 lens. C series On September 8, 2013, Leica announced the Leica C (Typ 112) , a compact camera with an electronic viewfinder based on the Panasonic DMC-LF1.

  5. Summarit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summarit

    The Summarit was initially introduced as Leica's fastest lens in 1949 with a maximum aperture of f/1.5. Since then, the Noctilux and Summilux named lenses have superseded this old aperture. [1] On 3 August 2007 Leica revived the name and announced a series of less expensive lenses, the Summarit-M.

  6. Leica M4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leica_M4

    The M4 started production in November 1966, as the direct successor of the M3 and M2, featuring framelines for 35 mm, 50 mm, 90 mm and 135 mm lenses in a 0.72 magnification viewfinder. It has the frame counter of the M3, with automatic reset after reloading. The M4 was the last Leica rangefinder of this era to be predominantly hand-built.

  7. Cosina Voigtländer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosina_Voigtländer

    Cosina started producing cameras and lenses under the Voigtländer brand in 1999, when it introduced a new M39 mount body and lenses. It has since produced a prodigious variety of these lenses in M39x26, Leica M mount, Nikon S rangefinder mount (some fully usable with Contax RF bodies), and SLR mounts including M42 and Nikon F.

  8. Minolta CLE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minolta_CLE

    Three of Minolta's Rokkor brand of lenses were made specially for the CLE: the M-Rokkor 28 mm f / 2.8 wide-angle, the M-Rokkor (-QF) 40 mm f / 2 standard, and the M-Rokkor 90 mm f / 4 telephoto. The earlier Leica CL 40 mm and 90 mm lenses had single coatings , and later Minolta CL-E versions of these two lenses, plus a 28 mm, were multi-coated ...

  9. Lenses for SLR and DSLR cameras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenses_for_SLR_and_DSLR...

    The Nikon F-mount lens systems and the Pentax K-mount systems are the only 35 mm SLR camera systems (apart from the Leica M-mount rangefinder system) that allow a photographer to use a mechanical SLR camera body, a fully automatic SLR camera body, and a DSLR camera body, all utilizing the same lenses.