Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 11:52 AM 10/17/97 EDT, John Lowther wrote: > >Someone mentioned using his 21mm/3.4 Super Angulon for photographing >the interior of architectural models. > >I have had fairly serious trouble with parallax using the 21mm viewfinder >on close-ups: I get a lot more foreground than I expect from the viewfinder... >especially on low angle shots... > >What I thought would be a wild flower with Mt. Rainier in the background, >came out gravel from the roadside in the foreground, flower in the mid, >and Mt. Rainier in the background... F/16 and hyperfocal focusing so the >DOF was from off the bottom of the focusing scale to infinity... > > - John Lowther. Hmmmm... as Tom McGuane so thoughtfully detailed for us, what I'm about to say is a clear case of INTERATION. Use a 15mm, 19mm, 21mm, 24mm, what ever suits you on an R Leica, and all of those problems disappear. There are some things that just work better when you are looking THROUGH the lens rather than OVER the lens. And I don't think a Visoflex can help you here. You'll have to use the M camera with the built-in Visoflex. The M/Viso/R, nicknamed R. This is **NOT** a "my camera is better than yours" post. If one type camera was perfect for every situation, there would be no reason to have two. You can learn to cope with what you described above with the M/21, but it always adds another level of complexity and anxiety (did I really get the photograph?) to your work. Now, there are plenty of people on the LUL that can give you advice as to how to cope with the M parallax problem. Hopefully they will, as I know many of them have solved this many many years ago. And probably have an easy solution. Jim