Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/06/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Group - Just visited Ben's site in its entirety. Very nice work - and some very helpful info. It inspired me to jot a few notes of an image I made on Memorial Day and just printed the (exhibition grade) print yesterday. My wife and I live in the Berkshire Hills of Western Massachusetts. I needed to pick her up from a trip - to New Hampshire with some friends - in Bennington, Vermont, 35 miles north of us. As I was driving along the highway in Williamstown, Mass., I saw the most gorgeous landscape unfolding before my eyes - hills, barns, cows, woods and fields - miles of it. And there were lots of white fluffy clouds everywhere. The sun was blocked by a number of clouds, creating a patchwork of light and shadow on the landscape. My M4-P was loaded with Agfa APX25 and had the 50 Summicron-M (latest) with Yellow-Green B&W filter (coated). I used the sunny 16 rule (approx) and shot at 1/15 sec. @ f/11 1/2. Processed the film in XTOL 1:1, 6 min @68. The results are absolutely stunning! My gallery owner saw the work print and was bowled over by the quality (he has an M camera as well). The light and dark on the hills and fields is spectacular enough but the sun caught the white sides of a few of the buildings in the shadows (sort of like in Ansel's "Moonrise, Hernandez, NM"). The final image is 9X14 - may well do it 13X20. What is so amazing to me is the quality possible with Leica equipment. I usually use Hasselblad for this type of work but don't always have it with me. The Leica is always by my side, no matter what. A tripod is always at hand in my trunk. The combination of the Leica/Summicron/Tripod/APX25 gives me a real edge so I don't have to miss ANY fine art landscape sort of image even without having a larger format with me. After making this image, I picked up my wife and we drove a few miles into the Green Mountains of Vermont. At elevations of around 2000 ft. the buds on the trees hadn't even swollen! The hills were still a drab grey and was it ever cold! Regards, Curt Elizabeth Mei Wong Henry Curtis Miller, M.P.A. Pittsfield, Massachusetts In the Berkshires, next door to Tanglewood