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  • Leon_B. changed the title to The Q3 43 in Crete - an article by Jonathan Slack
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Thank you Jono - for the beautiful pictures and article. It shows how good the Leica Q3 43 is for the details.

Something I was missing a bit from my Q3.

So for me I ended up buying the Leica Q3 43 (and I also have the Q3 28)

And I couldn't be happier with that combo.

I can now solve everything from 26-70 can in other brands.

But the M series - for me - lie a bit quiet - right now, I think.

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..read that article yesterday evening - thank you very much for this @jonoslack !
It is very much appreciated, I've enjoyed reading what you wrote (definitely makes me want to fly to Crete immediately) - and also the pictures (goat in the bushes and trees on the beach being among my favourites) 🙂

I'm not in the market for a Q at all, but do want one now anyway 😅
By now I've seen quite a lot of images shot with the Q3 43 (from your articles as well as from others) that really impressed me.

You describe the lens as having "gentle and precise detail in focus and a lovely bokeh out of focus" - 
looking at the portraits you posted especially (and also with some of the landscape shots) I've got to say that I do agree with the latter, but frankly I'm finding the sharp parts not that gentle at all oftentimes - to me that lens can look quite "strict" actually (and I do feel the same about the 35 and 50 M APO's).

Again thank you for that nice article, and have a great day! 🙋‍♂️

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15 minutes ago, T I N O said:

..read that article yesterday evening - thank you very much for this @jonoslack !
It is very much appreciated, I've enjoyed reading what you wrote (definitely makes me want to fly to Crete immediately) - and also the pictures (goat in the bushes and trees on the beach being among my favourites) 🙂

I'm not in the market for a Q at all, but do want one now anyway 😅
By now I've seen quite a lot of images shot with the Q3 43 (from your articles as well as from others) that really impressed me.

You describe the lens as having "gentle and precise detail in focus and a lovely bokeh out of focus" - 
looking at the portraits you posted especially (and also with some of the landscape shots) I've got to say that I do agree with the latter, but frankly I'm finding the sharp parts not that gentle at all oftentimes - to me that lens can look quite "strict" actually (and I do feel the same about the 35 and 50 M APO's).

Again thank you for that nice article, and have a great day! 🙋‍♂️

Hi There

I'm glad you enjoyed it. As for the detail, I think there is probably an issue with compressing the files for the internet. What I'm trying to get across is the distinction between detail (as you find in this lens) and acutance (as you would find in a Noctilux f1.2 at f8 for instance). it's a difference between high contrast edges (acutance) and detail (apo). 

But of course all this stuff is very subjective!

All the best

Jono

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Just came yesterday evening back from a business trip in the US and read your article in a kind of ,sitting half a meter beside me‘-mind and enjoyed it very much and do feel much more awake now. Thanks!

The Q343 seems to be a very nice tool, but more important is the capable hand holding it. I believe with the easy non technical way how you describe the tool, combined with the lovely photos you could also make a wrench look like a desirable tool in a photography forum 😄

 

I had the first Q and after leaving the Ms behind me I am only invested in the SL-line and the Q3 anymore. And to be honest, the Q3 is carrying the majority of the workload, I just love it. Naturally the 43 is an interesting extension, a bit too close to the 28[26] mm of the Q3 for my taste, but still very interesting. For its alone the 43mm choice was very clever, just in a possible combination with the Q3 it is, ah let’s say, something to chew on before making the move. Though, I come from being a 35mm shooter all over and from there went either significant wider (21 or 24mm) or much longer. Never really fell in love with 50mm. But I used a Olympus 35-SP camera quite a lot, which had 42mm and loved it. The Q was something I desired, but needed to get used to the focal lense, which I meanwhile absolutely love, with the potential to crop it is a very versatile tool.

 

Your pictures clearly show how versatile 43mm can be and how well the APO lens performs. I especially love how the lens renders the transition from in focus to out of focus areas - it is a very pleasant rendering.

 

This and your initial review are great articles, again. Thanks.

 

Edited by Daniel C.1975
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10 hours ago, Daniel C.1975 said:

Just came yesterday evening back from a business trip in the US and read your article in a kind of ,sitting half a meter beside me‘-mind and enjoyed it very much and do feel much more awake now. Thanks!

The Q343 seems to be a very nice tool, but more important is the capable hand holding it. I believe with the easy non technical way how you describe the tool, combined with the lovely photos you could also make a wrench look like a desirable tool in a photography forum 😄

 

I had the first Q and after leaving the Ms behind me I am only invested in the SL-line and the Q3 anymore. And to be honest, the Q3 is carrying the majority of the workload, I just love it. Naturally the 43 is an interesting extension, a bit too close to the 28[26] mm of the Q3 for my taste, but still very interesting. For its alone the 43mm choice was very clever, just in a possible combination with the Q3 it is, ah let’s say, something to chew on before making the move. Though, I come from being a 35mm shooter all over and from there went either significant wider (21 or 24mm) or much longer. Never really fell in love with 50mm. But I used a Olympus 35-SP camera quite a lot, which had 42mm and loved it. The Q was something I desired, but needed to get used to the focal lense, which I meanwhile absolutely love, with the potential to crop it is a very versatile tool.

 

Your pictures clearly show how versatile 43mm can be and how well the APO lens performs. I especially love how the lens renders the transition from in focus to out of focus areas - it is a very pleasant rendering.

 

This and your initial review are great articles, again. Thanks.

 

Thank you Daniel - glad you enjoyed it, and that really is my intention!

All the best

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Very good review Jono, thank you for posting this. My budget for cameras is maxed out this year but the 43 is certainly on my shortlist.

Equally interesting is the location on Crete you visit and use for testing. I spent some time in Agia Roumeli and Palaiochora (a bit further along the coast) Lovely walking country and it was always my intention to return and stay at Loutro. Other destinations keep getting in the way but it is still on my list. Your excellent pictures have inspired me to bump it up a couple of places. Who knows, if I do get there it may be with a 43 😀

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7 minutes ago, Steven Lane said:

Very good review Jono, thank you for posting this. My budget for cameras is maxed out this year but the 43 is certainly on my shortlist.

Equally interesting is the location on Crete you visit and use for testing. I spent some time in Agia Roumeli and Palaiochora (a bit further along the coast) Lovely walking country and it was always my intention to return and stay at Loutro. Other destinations keep getting in the way but it is still on my list. Your excellent pictures have inspired me to bump it up a couple of places. Who knows, if I do get there it may be with a 43 😀

Paleochora is lovely, but there are cars and crowds, Agia Roumeli is peaceful in the mornings and the evenings, but filled with the Samaria crowds in the afternoons, and the restaurants are a bit hmmmmm. Loutro isn't the place to spend a day, but in the evening it's great, with good restaurants and bars . . . and wonderful walking!

 

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Yes, great article Jono, thanks. So good that it persuaded me to buy a Q3 43.

Luckily you also described some beautiful, isolated locations in Crete which is where I'll have to emigrate to when my wife finds out!

 

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18 minutes ago, Corius said:

Yes, great article Jono, thanks. So good that it persuaded me to buy a Q3 43.

Luckily you also described some beautiful, isolated locations in Crete which is where I'll have to emigrate to when my wife finds out!

 

I recommend Aghios Pavlos, but possibly not in November 🥶

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  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
Just now, jjroroek said:

hai jonathan. problaby i'm wrong but non of the pictures look razor sharp. is it besause of the upload to the forum?

Hi There

Well, They are small jpgs created from Lightroom - mostly with no sharpening done, either before or after export. I find that if you maximise sharpness on LR then exporting jpgs look 'crunchy' and unpleasant, sharpening afterwards is a real balls-ache! I'm not sure if anything else happens on the forum upload - personally I don't think they look too bad,  the lens is incredibly good - the real revelation of the camera. 

At any rate, if they are not to your taste because they aren't sharp enough, then I'm to blame, not the camera!

best

Jonathan

 

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