Hologon
The Zeiss Hologon is an ultra wide-angle f=15mm f/8 triplet lens, providing a 110° angle of view for 35mm format cameras. The Hologon was originally fitted to a dedicated camera, the Zeiss Ikon Contarex Hologon in the late 1960s; as sales of that camera were poor and the Zeiss Ikon company itself was going bankrupt, an additional 225 lenses were made in Leica M mount and released for sale in 1972 as the only Zeiss-branded lenses for Leica rangefinders until the ZM line was released in 2005. The Hologon name was revived in 1994 for a recomputed f=16mm f/8 lens fitted to the Contax G series of rangefinder cameras.
Introduced in | 1966 |
---|---|
Author | Erhard Glatzel |
Construction | 3 elements in 3 groups |
Aperture | ƒ/8 |
Design
The Hologon was designed by Erhard Glatzel and others at Zeiss in 1966[1][2] and patented in 1972. It is a largely symmetric triplet with a fixed aperture; the original German patent application describes a lens with 120° angle of coverage and a f/8 maximum aperture, while the US patent expands this to three related designs with different coverage angles and apertures (120° f/8, 110° f/5.6, and 90° f/8). In each design, the first and third hemispherical elements are made of optical glass with the same refractive index.[3] At least one prototype Hologon was built in 1964 or 1965 as a large-format lens with a focal length of 110 mm.[4] It has been shown via radiograph the large format Hologon 8/110mm uses a leaf shutter between the second and third elements, with adjustments to the first and third elements to accommodate it.[5] The prototype Hologon, internally known as the Bilagon, was sold at auction in 2010 for €28800.[6]
The name "Hologon" is derived from the Greek words holos, meaning "everything" or "complete", and gonia, meaning "angle"; gonia contributed the final syllable -gon, which had been used in preceding Zeiss wide-angle lens designs such as the Zeiss Distagon and Biogon.[2] As built, the symmetrical design for the Hologon 8/15mm by Glatzel provided excellent correction of coma, spherical and chromatic aberration, astigmatism, and curvature of field; the main fault was vignetting due to the cos4 law, which was corrected by supplying a graduated neutral density filter to make the exposure more even across the film frame.[5][7] Although the lens consists of only three elements, manufacturing proved difficult.[5]
Contarex Hologon ultra wide
The original Hologon (Contarex Hologon 8/15mm) was first released in 1969 as a f=15 mm f/8 lens affixed to a dedicated camera, the Zeiss Ikon Contarex Hologon. In this version, the lens is fixed focus and aperture; the size of the aperture is set by the incised notch in the second element.[5] Depth of field ranged from 0.5 m (20 in) to infinity.[8] A bubble level is fitted to the top of the (non-reflex) viewfinder.[9] Typically, a pistol grip is affixed to the Hologon camera to avoid inadvertently taking pictures of the photographer's fingers.[8][10]
Approximately 1,400 Contarex Hologon cameras were made;[7][10] production continued through 1975 in small batches.[5] In 1971, the list price for the Hologon was US$825 (equivalent to $5,961 in 2022), marked up from the wholesale cost of US$550 (equivalent to $3,974 in 2022).[11]
M Hologon 8/15mm
The Contarex Hologon 8/15mm lens was later released as part of a set including a finder (with bubble level) and center graduated neutral density filter for Leica M cameras in 1972 (M Hologon 8/15mm). Estimates of production for the M Hologon 8/15mm range from 225 to 1,000.[12][13] The M Hologon 8/15mm gained a focusing helicoid compared to the Contarex Hologon 8/15mm, and could now be focused down to 0.2 m (7.9 in).[12][13] Because of the low production numbers and unique focal length, some lenses have been separated from the Contarex Hologon and adapted to Leica mount.[14]
G Hologon 8/16mm
The G Hologon 8/16mm was announced with the Contax G1 in 1994;[15] the revised G Hologon 8/16mm retained the name from the earlier Contarex and M Hologon 8/15mm, but the construction was completely different, using 5 elements in 3 groups. Zeiss claimed that contrast had been improved by moving the rear element closer to the film plane. The new G Hologon 8/16mm was also provided with a graduated filter to provide a more even exposure.[16] The revised construction of the G Hologon 8/16mm also simplified assembly of the lens, as the cemented groups were easier to manufacture than the hemispherical front and rear elements of the Contarex and M Hologon 8/15mm.[2] Although nominally listed as a 16 mm lens, the focal length of the G Hologon 8/16mm is actually 16.5 mm and it provides coverage of 106° on the frame diagonal.[17] The G Hologon 8/16mm was the only lens for the Contax G that was manufactured in Germany.[18]
Like the earlier Contarex 8/15mm Hologon, the G Hologon 8/16mm also has been adapted unofficially to Leica M mount.[19]
References
- DE Application 1241637, Erhard Glatzel & Hans Schulz, "Dreilinsiges Weitwinkelobjektiv [Three-lens wide-angle lens]", issued 1 June 1967, assigned to Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH
- Nasse, Dr. Hubert H. (December 2011). From the series of articles on lens names: Distagon, Biogon and Hologon (PDF). Lenspire [blog] (Report). Carl Zeiss AG. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- US Grant 3661447, Erhard Glatzel; Hans Schulz & Ris Ruth et al., "Three lens element wide angle objective", issued 9 May 1972, assigned to Erhard Glatzel
- Foo, Leonard. "Carl Zeiss Designed 110mm 1:8 HOLOGON lens/compur shutter for LINHOF large format cameras - Part V". Malaysian Internet Resources. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Cavina, Marco. "Hypergon - Topogon - Russar - Biogon - Aviogon - Hologon: La storia definitiva dei super-grandangolari simmetrici" [Hypergon - Topogon - Russar - Biogon - Aviogon - Hologon: The definitive history of the super-wide angle symmetric lenses]. Retrieved 8 November 2018.
- Cröll, Arne (August 25, 2014). Large format lenses from Carl Zeiss Oberkochen 1950-1972 (PDF) (Report). Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Foo, Leonard. "Zeiss Ikon/Voigtlander/Contarex Hologon (10.0659) Superwide Camera w/ 8/15 (15mm f/8.0) & other Hologon Ultra-wideangle lens variations - Part III". Malaysian Internet Resources. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Elek, Mike (2018). "Zeiss Ikon Contarex Hologon". Classic Cameras. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Foo, Leonard. "Zeiss Ikon/Voigtlander/Contarex Hologon (10.0659) Superwide Camera w/ 8/15 (15mm f/8.0) & other Hologon Ultra-wideangle lens variations - Part III". Malaysian Internet Resources. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- "Zeiss Ikon Contarex Hologon". Pacific Rim Camera. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- "Zeiss Ikon — Voigtländer Confidential Dealer Price Schedule" (PDF). Pacific Rim Camera. February 15, 1971. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Bei, Jerry (March 14, 2018). "Zeiss Hologon 15mm F8 for Leica M". Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Foo, Leonard. "For LEICA M cameras - Part IV | Zeiss Ikon/Voigtlander/Contarex Carl Zeiss Hologon (10.0659) Superwide Camera w/ 8/15 (15mm f/8.0)". Malaysian Internet Resources. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Gandy, Stephen. "Adapted Zeiss 15/8 Hologon to Leica M Mount $2500". Cameraquest. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- "First Look: New Contax G1". Popular Photography. November 1994. pp. 26, 30, 186. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- "Carl Zeiss Hologon T* 16mm f8". Contax Cameras. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- "Hologon T* 8/16 datasheet" (PDF). Carl Zeiss. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- "Contax G2 (brochure)" (PDF). Kyocera Imaging. 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 June 2004. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- Cavina, Marco. "Zeiss Contax Hologon 16mm f/8 su Leica IIIF BD a vite" [Zeiss Contax Hologon 16mm f / 8 on Leica IIIF black dial screwmount]. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
External links
- Puts, Erwin. "Zeiss Contarex lenses: the myth explained". Retrieved 15 November 2018. Includes MTF chart for Hologon 8/15mm.
- "Erhard Glatzel". Zeiss Historica Society. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
- Kidger, Michael J. (2004). "1: Optimization". Intermediate Optical Design. Bellingham, Washington: SPIE Press. p. 1516. ISBN 0-8194-5217-3. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
The thickness of the central positive lens is a difficulty in that the aperture stop must be placed inside this lens, and it is clearly impossible for the stop diameter to be variable in the normal way.
- "Contarex Hologon ultra wide". Popular Photography. April 1970.
- Converted Contax G lens for Leica M packages