Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/11/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 06:59 AM 11/24/97 +0800, you wrote: >Hello luggers, > >I'd first like to thank you to those who responded on my query regarding >2nd body for the M6. >Out of the blues, a friend suggested that I mix the M and the R cameras >together. Something like this: > >Since I already have an M6 with a 35 & 50 lens, he recommended that for a >2nd body I get an R6.2 or R8 and buy a 28/2.8 R and 90/2.0 R for it. He >feels that wideangles & long lenses are best used w/ the slr ? > >Does anybody here have experience with this scenario ? Perhaps some >comments and suggestions (pro's and cons) would be nice to hear. > >Again, many thanks for the support ! > >Ferdinand Ferdinand, I usually don't participate in advising people as to what to buy in photographic equipment. There are so many factors involved that it is virtually impossible to extrapolate one persons way of working and needs, over to another person. M and R cameras have different missions in life. And that mission is tied closely to what kind of photographs the photographer takes. What the end use is. Etc. Each of us can only tell you what we individually do and why. I'm an R user because I use lenses from 15mm to 350 + 2x = 700mm. I like composing on a 2D ground glass (like MF and LF). I like seeing my depth of field (DOF preview). My R cameras are on tripods 99% of the time. I use polarizers, warming filters, and graduated nd and color filters. I also use the 70-180 APO zoom. These last parts are very cumbersome (albeit nearly impossible) on an M. And I like being totally familiar with a single operating method. I don't do the type of photography that M cameras are famous for. I would not want to switch operating methods just because I had changed lenses. My single piece of advice is to, once you figure out what kind of photography you want to do, outfit yourself with a comfortable set of tools that allow you to accomplish this end. You may need more than one photographic kit, if you pursue more than one photographic discipline. I use an R7 and a bunch of lenses for book publications and photography that an be easily handled with this equipment. I also use a Linhof 4X5 Master Technika for fine art (mostly landscape, high definition stuff) where the image has to jump off of the print at 20x24 and larger. Ferdinand, you'll have to be your own guide. Figure out what you want to do, then figure out the best way to do it. Your way, will indeed, be your way. Not my way, or anybody else's way. Jim