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The Rodenstock Imagon is an achromat doublet photographic lens design uncorrected for
spherical aberration In optics, spherical aberration (SA) is a type of aberration found in optical systems that have elements with spherical surfaces. Lenses and curved mirrors are prime examples, because this shape is easier to manufacture. Light rays that strik ...
used together with diffusion discs ("sink strainers") called
sieve aperture In optics, a diaphragm is a thin opaque structure with an opening (aperture) at its center. The role of the diaphragm is to ''stop'' the passage of light, except for the light passing through the ''aperture''. Thus it is also called a stop (an ...
( in German). The lens is one of the classic professional
soft-focus In photography, soft focus is a lens flaw, in which the lens forms images that are blurred due to spherical aberration. A soft focus lens deliberately introduces spherical aberration in order to give the appearance of blurring the image while ...
"portrait lenses". In a joint effort with the pioneering photographer Heinrich Kühn, who, as a
pictorialist Pictorialism is an international style and aesthetic movement that dominated photography during the later 19th and early 20th centuries. There is no standard definition of the term, but in general it refers to a style in which the photographer ha ...
, was artistically seeking for "romantic softness without sugariness, blurring without a woolly effect" in images and had been experimenting with binocular lenses and soft filters and rasters in the 1920s already, the lens was technically designed by , founder of the optical company in
Munich Munich ( ; german: München ; bar, Minga ) is the capital and most populous city of the German state of Bavaria. With a population of 1,558,395 inhabitants as of 31 July 2020, it is the third-largest city in Germany, after Berlin and ...
, Germany. The resulting lens was marketed as Anachromat Kühn. Later in 1928, the lens became the Tiefenbildner-Imagon, which was introduced by Rodenstock in 1930/1931 and produced up into the 1990s. The unusual term ' is a German composition, which can be best translated as " depth-of-field creator, modulator or painter" in an artistic sense; this designation was later dropped. Imagons do not typically have shutter mechanisms and are instead mounted on shutters (i.e.,
Copal Copal is tree resin, particularly the aromatic resins from the copal tree ''Protium copal'' (Burseraceae) used by the cultures of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica as ceremonially burned incense and for other purposes. More generally, copal includes re ...
large format shutters). There are also variants which can be mounted on focusing helicoids or bellows to be used with medium format or 35 mm cameras. All Imagons were originally sold with three different diffusion discs matched to its focal length. The Imagon equivalent to aperture size is determined by the interplay between the imagon lens central opening and the modifiable arrangement of smaller openings on the diffusion disc. These taken together produce an "
H-stop In optics, the f-number of an optical system such as a camera lens is the ratio of the system's focal length to the diameter of the entrance pupil ("clear aperture").Smith, Warren ''Modern Optical Engineering'', 4th Ed., 2007 McGraw-Hill Pro ...
" designation which approximates the corresponding f-stop of a normal lens. By rotating the outer rim of the disc, the opening of these smaller holes can be modified, and by this the amount of softness, which superimposes the sharper core of the image, is also changed. Wider H-stops, or more-open holes, mean more softness. Focus is set with the diffusion disc closed. The diffusion disc is then opened to the degree desired to record the image.


List of lens models

List of known Anachromat Kühn Dr. Staeble lenses: * 170 mm (A17; for 9×12 cm) * 200 mm (A20; for 9×12 cm) * 250 mm (A25; for 9×12 cm) * 310 mm (A31, for 9×12 cm) List of known Rodenstock Imagon lenses: * 90 mm (for 35 mm; prototype for pre-
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
Leica only) * 120 mm H=4.5 (for 35 mm and 6×6 cm) * 150 mm H=5.8 (for 6×6 cm) * 170 mm H=5.4 (for 6×9 cm) * 200 mm H=5.4 (for 9×12 cm) * 200 mm H=5.8 (for 4.5×6 cm, 6×6 cm, 6×7 cm, 6×9 cm, and 4×5") * 250 mm H=5.4 (for 10×15 cm) * 250 mm H=5.8 (for 4×5") * 300 mm H=5.6 (for 13×18 cm) * 300 mm H=7.7 (for 5×7") * 360 mm H=5.8 (for 16×21 cm and 8×10") * 420 mm H=6.0 (for 18×24 cm) * 480 mm H=6.2 (for 24×30 cm)


See also

* *
Soft-focus lens In photography, soft focus is a lens (optics), lens optical aberration, flaw, in which the lens forms images that are blurred due to spherical aberration. A soft focus lens deliberately introduces spherical aberration in order to give the appea ...
*
Bokeh In photography, bokeh ( or ; ) is the aesthetic quality of the blur produced in out-of-focus parts of an image. Bokeh has also been defined as "the way the lens renders out-of-focus points of light". Differences in lens aberrations and ...
* Depth-of-field


References


Further reading

* Alfons Scholz: ''Lichtbilder mit dem Imagon''. vwi Verlag, Starnberg 1980


External links

* Harold M. Merklinger
''Understanding Boke.''
* Brian Lewington

{{DEFAULTSORT:Imagon Photographic lens designs Soft-focus lenses Rodenstock lenses