Drisley.
I thought I was nuts for noticing differences; imagining it. I kind of like the differences. "Neutral" reproduction is a lie in photography any way.
At work, the 70-200 f/2.8L IS is WARM, golden even, (in addition to contrasty). Makes it attractive for long portraits, not just sports. I like the warm tone. It renders skin in midday like it's morning or evening! Who could ask for better? I've noticed the 70-200 f/4 shares this.
At work, a new 60mm EF-S macro is COOL, not blue cool, but Kodachrome 25 or 64 of old cool. This lens is also contrasty, while neutral, which strengthens the attraction of its images. Again, I like it.
For personal travel use I bought the controversial 70-300 DO. This lens is definitely "bluish" cool, not neutral cool like the EF-S 60mm. It misses auto white balance often.
But, this lens has fabulous contrast AND THE MOST AMAZING LACK OF CHROMATIC ABBERATION. It took me a week to learn how to use it effectively. E.g., yesterday evening, sun moving lower, kids playing basketball in the yard, I spot metered this weed leaf with sun straight behind it:
http://postit.rutgers.edu …f%20Silhouette%2002%2Ejpg
With the IS, I handheld this at 300mm 1/30 from 2 meters! NO POST PROCESSING!
http://postit.rutgers.edu …f%20Silhouette%2001%2Ejpg
This one was 1/125
Where's the purple CA on all these edges? Absent! It was light outside, but spot metering the leaf dropped the forest background out.
My 17-40mm f/4L is neutral to pinkish warm.
I think these good lenses have higher contrast, which must have something to do with our perception of color. I'm not a physics/color theory person. Just take pictures.
J