For those of you that read my article called ‘Clash of the Titans’ which was featured on Steve Huff’s website, you know that the Noctilux and fast lenses in general spark a lot of interest from all kinds of photographers; not only for their abilities to provide faster shooting speeds in low light conditions, but more so for their unique rendering and signatures of the way they capture light and draw out of focus areas.
The Noctilux-M is quite possibly Leica’s biggest celebrated lens, and is the star-child of the company’s lens design history. Historically, it has always been a 50mm lens, starting with the 50mm f/1.2 in 1966, then the different variants made with an f/1 aperture in 1976, and then the current model pushed to an incredible f/0.95 in 2008. Fast forward almost 10 years and we are blessed with Leica’s latest marvel, in a 75mm focal length, and technically their slowest speed Noctilux to date.