Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/11/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Eric wrote: <<<<<But sometimes you have to shoot a lot of film, simply because as you shoot, you begin to see new things. If you stop, you might miss the best picture that only comes as you begin to whittle away the lesser pictures. >>>>>> Hi Eric, There are folks who believe the more you shoot the greater your chance of getting "the" picture. Because if you use enough film you are bound to get the perfect photograph sooner or later. "WRONG!" Using great amounts of film by an inexperienced photographer or an incompetent one will not give them the "award winning photograph." It rarely happens and if it does, then that truly is "pure luck!" What some people don't understand is, we documenting photographers are no different than a writer who starts to write a book. He begins to write without any thought in numbers of words, paragraphs or pages. She starts to create sentences forming paragraphs and they in turn form chapters. Before they are finished they have used a great number of words (read here rolls of film!). Their work is edited, rewritten and finally the finished product goes to press. Photographers work very similarly, we start shooting without any thought of "how many frames" (read here words). Our frames are edited, sometimes reshot and when we are done, we cut to final images for the essay. Film is the cheapest commodity of an assignment, much like words. But if we do not "write with our cameras" in that we use film as the writer uses his or her words, then how do we know we have done the very best coverage possible? <<<But sometimes you have to shoot a lot of film, simply because as you shoot, you begin to see new things.>>>>>>>> That is very true. You begin to feel how the light is working and changing as you shoot your way through the maze of motivating actions or scenes. I never relate to film or how much I may use, much like an artist begins a canvass rarely concerns himself with "how many tubes of paint" he will use. They begin with the sole object of creating a finished piece of work. Using the same logic, why would we ever consider how much film we use on a documentary? It is interesting though to take one Leica, one lens and one roll of film and shoot an assignment. A personal project kind of thing and simply shoot an exciting series of pictures. What this does is make you look at the subject more objectively, select the Leica lens and which model (M6 or R8) that will allow you to do the best job. Shooting something like this sorts out the "machine gun shooter" from the "single shot shooter" because volume of film isn't available with only one roll. Simply put, "more doesn't make you better, unless you are paying attention and know what you are doing!" I do the "one roll, one Leica" thing every once in awhile simply as a "refresher shoot". Works wonders for "learning to see" when you have to work at it with 36 frames. Besides it makes you "look harder" about what works and what doesn't. In the end it makes you a better photographer when the time comes that your 5 or 6 Leicas are smoking with film flying in all directions! :) ted