A Site dedicated Vintage technology
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Vintage Lenses
  4. /
  5. Excellent Kodak Retina Ysarex f/2.8 50 mm lens on...

Excellent Kodak Retina Ysarex f/2.8 50 mm lens on Fuji X-T1

In this post I'm going to show some pictures I took on my Fuji X-T1 mirrorless camera using a vintage Kodak Retina Ysarex f/2.8 50 mm lens, made by Rodenstock, which was supplied as a standard lens on the Retina Reflex series of cameras.

Of course, the Kodak Retina Ysarex won't fit onto a Fuji X-T1 without an adapter, so to shoot these pictures I bought a cheap adapter from eBay to fit the lens on the camera. In fact, the adapter I bought doesn't directly adapt the Retina DKL mount to Fuji X mount; I bought an adapter which allows the lens to fit onto a camera with a Pentax K mount.

In my case, this gives me the maximum flexibility, because I have K mount adapters for all my digital cameras so with this adapter I can use the lens on my Pentax K-5 directly and the Ricoh GXR or Fuji X-T1 via their K mount adapters. Since I also have a variety of Pentax film cameras with the K mount I can also use the Retina Ysarex on those as well with this adapter.

The Retina lens is one of a variety of vintage lenses which has the aperture control on the camera body rather than the lens, so the adapter I bought has an adjustment ring to set the aperture with the f-stop settings marked. I don't know that it is completely accurate, but it looked pretty close.

In order to see how the lens performed with the Fuji X-T1, my wife and I took our 8-month-old puppy Freddy down to the local park for a walk / photo shoot. Jan looked after Freddy, and I looked after the Fuji / Retina Ysarex combination - I have to say I had the easier task!

To use the lens I set the Fuji X-T1 to auto ISO and auto shutter speed with manual focusing. In effect, this puts the camera in aperture priority mode and although the ISO can float to quite high values using this setting it was very bright and sunny on the day I took these pictures, so I didn't worry about the ISO at all.

For metering, I set the X-T1 to matrix metering for the majority of these shots.

Photos taken with the Kodak Retina Ysarex

The images below show the best of the pictures I took with the Kodak Retina Ysarex.

In my view the Ysarex performed extremely well. I expected it to be good because I've seen pictures taken with the Retina Reflex and was very impressed, but I didn't realise just how good the lens is. The contrast and colour rendition is really good and certainly puts the lens into the top category of vintage lens I own. The only slight downside is that it is a 50 mm lens, which when the crop factor of the APS-C sensor in the Fuji X-T1 is taken into account makes the lens a 75 mm short telephoto. That makes it ideal for portraits, but not really suited for general picture taking.

Perhaps I'll look out for a 35 mm or 28 mm version of the Kodak Retina Ysarex because that would be a really good lens to own.

How useful was this article?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 5 / 5. Vote count: 2

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this article.

As you found this post useful...

Please consider sharing to social media

We are sorry that this post was not useful for you!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

Leave a Reply

Newsletter



    Area of interest

    Cameras & Lenses
    Photos & Films
    Projectors
    Radios & Tape Recorders

    I accept the privacy statement

    You can edit your preferences and unsubscribe at any time after subscribing. Privacy Statement

    All content @SimonHawketts 2024
    linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram
    ×