Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/01/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Pascal wrote: <<<<However, I have quite often experienced that feet are "cut off" on my pictures (slides or photos) although I am quite positive that they were completely visible in the finder at the time the picture was taken. >>>>> Hi Pascal, I haven't seen this kind of thing at all. May I make a quick suggestion and save you some time and chopped feet. Put the camera on a tripod, frame very carefully in the view finder that the feet and heads are within the area seen in the viewfinder and shoot a frame or two. Make a note of exactly where the feet were and not that you "were sure they were in the viewfinder at time of tripping shutter". If you can do this vertically and horizontally then you'll know for sure what you see is what you get or not what you get. Do this on cheap film and do not have the film mounted as then you'll see the full frame. The other is without film and I don't know that this would be as effective without a bunch of fiddling. As before put the camera on a tripod "EMPTY". Frame the image as before with feet where you see them in the viewfinder, then open the back of the camera, open shutter on "T" and hold the shutter open. place a piece of ground glass or easier a cut piece of "wax paper" as a ground glass at the film gate and see what is there on the paper. Personally I'd opt for real film and negs or slides to look at. But the camera must be on a locked down tripod and a note of where the feet are for each frame. I guess it's always possible you could have a wonky camera and the viewfinder isn't covering what you think it covers. And never mind what the manual says. It's looking at what you see is what you get on film that counts.:) ted