Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/10/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Not that I know much about optical design and glass formulation, but Leica lenses have a very nice characteristic which is different from Nikon lenses which is different from Zeiss lenses which is different from Schneider lenses ... etc, etc. and so on. I like Leica lenses, they have a nice feel. I also like Nikon, Zeiss, Schneider, Canon glass ... they have attributes that are excellent as well. Which I choose to work with depends upon my mood and what I want to shoot. If they were all the same, what would be the point of having any one over another? Either you find a lens' characteristics satisfying or you don't. Either it's sharp, or fuzzy, enough to get you what you want. Taking pictures that are emotive and special is an art which transcends the glass and the camera. >In what you say, the case is made: on the complex flagship teles >that pros need, Nikon and Canon do spend the money. On a 50 mm. >low-end lens, they don't--so you get a low-quality, poorly built >piece. Others fit somewhere in between. I take some exception at calling a Nikon or Canon lens "low-quality, poorly built". Even the el-cheap Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 E series lens I bought at a flea market 10 years ago for $30 produces flawless pictures after being pounded with a 4fps motor drive for the past 10 years. No Nikkor lens I've ever purchased can be said to be low-quality or poorly built, they've all done me up to 18 years of brilliant service so far with no end in sight. And most were bought used, already thrashed by pros. They are still in great shape. >amateur photographers often think that people pictures are taken >by sneaking up on them with a long lens, as SLR's permit, but in >fact this is unpleasant for the subjects. You have to work right >in the heart of things and interact with your subjects Right there lies the truth of it as far as I'm concerned. A Leica M is reasonably unobtrusive compared to an Nikon F5 or Canon EOS-1, but how you use the camera is every bit as important as the camera's appearance. The M is quiet and doesn't have a big lens sticking out of it, so it's easier to be unobtrusive. I find a smaller camera even better: some of my very best people pictures have been done with a Rollei 35 and an Olympus Stylus. In all of it, each of these cameras and lenses have a personality and a sensitive photographer works to get the most out of whatever it might be. I personally like doing people photography with 20-50mm focal lengths, most usually 35-50mm. It lets me get in with the subjects and interact with them. More dedicated portraiture and scenics I do with 85-135mm, sports needs the long long lenses usually. Graphic stuff tends to the wide and the very long. >with an M, >and they accept your presence. I have another, simpler >explanation to suggest, based on my own experience: I think >people these days react to a Leica M, especially in black, as if >it were a point and shoot. SLR's, especially pro ones like the >Canon EOS-1 and the Nikon F4 and 5, have become huge and >intimidating machines--think of an EOS-1 equipped with their >excellent f2.8 28-70, for instance. The contrast with the M is >tremendous. The big guns in the SLR world have, in my opinion, distanced themselves from the fine art photographer's needs by size, complexity and just plain too much stuff. My Nikon FMs, on the other hand, are small, light and reasonably unobtrusive, about as much so as my Leica M is (was... I just sold it). Hmm, I think I'll do a people show exclusively with Leica Minizoom, Rollei 35 and Nikon One Touch. And I'll ask the judges to tell me what cameras they think the pictures were made with. Godfrey