Lens Test: Nikon 135mm f/2D AF DC-Nikkor
Posted on August 4, 2007 - Filed Under Cameras, Photo, Reviews | Leave a Comment | 205 views
Nikon’s DC-Nikkor family is only two lenses deep, comprising just this one and a 105mm f/2. A full-frame lens, this 135mm f/2 ($1,080, street) converts to about 200mm on a Nikon D80.
Both of the DCs are topdrawer portrait lenses that offer Nikon shooters the ability to make out-of-focus areas appear softer by strategically introducing spherical aberration to just the defocused areas. (Sharp areas of the scene are not affected.)
This softening, called DC for Defocus Control, is especially useful when specular highlights in a defocused fore- or background are bright enough to draw attention from a portrait subject. Because smaller apertures suppress spherical aberration, defocus control is only available from f/2 through f/5.6.
Hands On:
The lens seems slightly heavy for a 135mm f/2. Weighing about 2 ounces more than Sony’s 135mm f/2.8, it’s nearly a pound heavier than the Canon softfocusing 135mm f/2.8. Finished in Nikon’s black crinkle coating, it also has a built-in telescoping lenshood and a generously broad manualfocusing ring that’s both rubberized and knurled. The MF/AF switch is a rotating, lockable collar.
AF action was fast and quiet. Physically, the most unusual thing here is the lens’ lockable frontbarrel DC aperture ring. It has two opposing scales (both f/2 through f/5.6), one for adjusting foreground defocus (the F scale), the other for background defocus (R, for Rear).
For Defocus Control to work, you must select the appropriate DC scale (F or R), and its aperture must match the shooting aperture. If there’s a discrepancy between the two, overall softness results. The wider the deviation, the softer the image will become.
Tags: lens, nikon d80, spherical aberrationComments
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