Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/01/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]LUGs, A few months ago, I received in the mail a copy of the most recent Leicaview. In it, there are many wonderful photographs by Eisenstaedt and an offer to buy a print of his La Scala photograph for a mere $5400. Mind you, this is a special price. Others would have to pay $6000. Cheap per Afred E. Newman. I must say that the pictures selected for reproduction in Leicaview are wonderful. However, details of Eisenstaedt's life are slightly on the inexact side. For example, Leicaview claims that Eisenstaedt was wounded at Verdun in 1916. In fact, he was wounded in Flanders two years later. Such details and others can be found int the wonderful book by Eisenstaedt himself and Arthur Goldsmith: "The Eye of Eisenstaedt." Leicaview also claims that Eisenstaedt usually only carried the latest M model and 28, 35, 50, and 90mm lenses. I wonder what he used to get the wonderful images in Ethiopia before it was liberated by the Italians in the late 1930s. In fact, Eisenstaedt used many other cameras, including the Eastman #3, Ermanox, Rolleiflex and Nikon F. Finding this book makes me feel much better. I like to use an SLR to compose scenery. Just today, I used my SL2 and 50mm lens (Summicron 25...) to photograph a nearby cement plant, which claims to be reclaiming a big part of a Colorado hill. With a 90-degree, 2X viewer this job was a pleasure. Moral of the story, don't believe everything you read and do your own research. Best of Light, Chris