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Petzval lens

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Petzval portrait lens.

The Petzval objective, or Petzval lens, is the first photographic portrait objective lens (with a 160 mm focal length) in the history of photography.[1] It was developed by the Slovak mathematics professor Joseph Petzval in 1840 in Vienna,[2] with technical advice provided by Peter Wilhelm Friedrich von Voigtländer [de]. The Voigtländer company went on to build the first Petzval lens in 1840 on behalf of Petzval, whereupon it became known throughout Europe.[2] Later, the optical instruments maker Carl Dietzler in Vienna also produced the Petzval lens.[2]

History

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The Voigtländer-Petzval objective lens was revolutionary and attracted the attention of the scientific world because it was the first mathematically calculated precision objective in the history of photography. Petzval's lens established two new features: firstly, it was faster compared to previous lenses, with a maximum aperture of 1:3.6. In comparison to Daguerre's daguerreotype camera lens of 1839, Petzval's design had 22 times the light-gathering capacity, which for the first time enabled portraits under favourable conditions with exposure times of less than a minute.

Additionally, Petzval calculated for the first time the composition of the lenses based on optical laws, whereas optics before had previously been ground and polished according to experience. For the calculations, 8 artillery gunners and 3 corporals were made available to Petzval by Archduke Louis of Austria (commander of the artillery), since the artillery was one of the few professions in which mathematical calculations were made.

By 1845, Petzval's collaboration with Voigtländer, who held the license to produce the lenses, had become "mired in disputes". Voigtländer moved production outside of Austria and therefore beyond Petzval's patent limitations.[3] The Petzval objective was produced by Voigtländer and sold worldwide; by 1862, Voigtländer had produced 60,000 pieces.[citation needed]

One disadvantage of Petzval's design was a sharp drop in sharpness at the edges, which was corrected in the Aplanat lens developed by Hugo Adolph Steinheil [de].

Optical design

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The lens consisted of two doublet lenses with an aperture stop in between. The front lens is well corrected for spherical aberrations but introduces coma. The second doublet corrects for this and the position of the stop corrects most of the astigmatism. However, this results in additional field curvature and vignetting. The total field of view is therefore restricted to about 30 degrees. An f-number of f/3.6 was achievable, which was considerably faster than other lenses of the time.

Lens revival

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In 2013, Lomography successfully launched a crowdfunding campaign at kickstarter.com to produce a new Petzval lens in Russia for film and digital cameras.[4]

Lensbaby offers Petzval lenses for modern cameras under the Burnside and Twist names.[5]

William Optics produces a 51 mm f/4.9 (250 mm focal length) Petzval lens for astrophotography.[6]

In 2019 TLS rehoused the Lomography lens for use on professional cinema cameras using th PL mount.[7] The 2023 feature film Poor Things used a rehoused 58mm and 85mm Lomography Petzval Lens rehoused by TLS.[8][9]

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References

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Ray, Sidney (2002). Applied Photographic Optics. Oxford, UK: Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-51540-4.

  1. ^ US Grant US2500046 A, Willy Schade, "Petzval-type photographic objective", published 7 March 1950, assigned to Eastman Kodak Co. 
  2. ^ a b c Day, Lance; McNeil, Ian (1996). Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology. London: Routledge. pp. 958–959. ISBN 0415060427.
  3. ^ Szatucsek, Zoltán; Taes, Sofie (September 2019). "Optical innovation: how the Petzval lens revolutionised portrait photography". Europeana (CC By-SA). Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  4. ^ Kickstarter
  5. ^ "Creative Photography".
  6. ^ "RedCat 51 APO F/4.9".
  7. ^ "The Petzval Lenses: A Modern Classic | True Lens Services repair, service and test film and video lenses. Lens engineers who are specialists in all aspects of precision engineering".
  8. ^ MARCKS, Iain (January 2024). "Life Anew: Poor Things". American Cinematographer. ASC. pp. 52–61.
  9. ^ "Behind the Scenes: Poor Things".