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Summar, the old way


Pecole

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Leitz has used the name Summar for lenses produced long before they developed the Leica. But this early 120mm brass version for plate camera fitted nicely in my "Fontenelle Leitz-Leica Collection".

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Leitz has used the name Summar for lenses produced long before they developed the Leica. But this early 120mm brass version for plate camera fitted nicely in my "Fontenelle Leitz-Leica Collection".

 

Beautiful.

 

It's true what our grandparents said then, Summars in the past were longer... :D

 

Regards,

 

Bill

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Truly lout ! but not bad a joke : if you don't ask for copyright, I'll have it filed in.

Enjoy the remains of this summer...I mean, the seasonal one.

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If I remember well, the Summar name was used also for a series of Micro lenses to be used on old Visoflex I.

The depicted item is really nice to see...apparently, it seems to have apertures from f4 to f96 ... DOF was clearly an issue to take care of... ;)

 

Yes, Luigi, you remember well, but the micro lenses are used on bellows, not on Visoflexes. Here are photos from my Fontenelle Collection : the Micro Summar 80 mm and four micros (with adaptor rings) Photar-Summar-Milar covering the 12,5 to 120 mm range

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  • 5 years later...

Hello from California: I have the same 120mm "Summar" lens, except "Summar" is engraved with a single "m", "Sumar", with a line, (it is called a macron), above the "m". I'm told it is the old German way to denote a double "m", ('mm"). Also mine has a screw-on black lens shade of some sort. It's interesting since I cannot find another like it, nor has it ever been described in any catalogs that I know of.

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Yes... this oddity of the "sumar" I remember did appear time ago on the Forum... and your explanation is the correct one :

 

<Wikipedia>

In the GermanKurrent handwriting, a macron is used on some consonants, especially n and m, as a shortform for a double consonant (for example, n̄ instead of nn)

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