Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/02/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted, About handholding speeds, I have a kinda funny story. First, I should point out to the LUG that many people PRACTICE handholding at slow speeds. H.C.-B. was said to train like an athlete--lift dumbbells, abstain from coffee, and try to get to bed early--because it helped him handhold down to 1/4th regularly. One of our Contributing Editors, Carl Weese, was an Olympic-level archer in his youth, and claims he can handhold to 1/8th using breath-control techniques he learned in archery. I remember reading a practical test in _POP_ or _Modern_. It was one of the old sages, Keppler or Schwalberg or maybe Goldberg, I can't remember. The test involved take a big piece of cardboard and punch small holes in it with a pencil, then put a bright light behind it, so the effect was like a "field of stars." Focusing the camera very carefully first, the idea was to make a succession of exposures at successively slower shutter speeds; an examination of the negs or chromes later was supposed to make it obvious to you just when camera-shake was setting in. One very interesting conclusion of the magazine's tests was that most people handhold most reliably at _middle_ speeds--1/125th to 1/500th. At faster speeds, camera shake increased slightly again--not grossly as with slow speeds, but noticeably. I think they ascribed this to internal vibration in the cameras they used. I never quite bought the whole test idea, because I know, from experience, that I can handhold to different speeds on different days. After a while, if you pay attention, you are able to "feel" it when you shoot--you have an idea (not very accurate sometimes) whether you nailed it, or moved it. And that's where my story comes in. When I first read that article, I decided to make a quick test of my own capabilities. I grabbed a ND filter and went outside and focused on a well-sunlit bush with lots of fine detail. I made a succession of exposures down to one second. But I *knew* as I shot that, for some unknown reason, I was simply handholding rock-steady that day--totally uncharacteristically <g>. Sure enough, _all_ the exposures down to 1 sec. were needle-sharp. I knew for sure they would be; I could feel it as I shot. I really had to laugh, because I'm a coffee drinker and I *know* from picturetaking epxerience that my handholding ability is average at best--mediocre is more like it. With a 35mm lens, I can only handhold down to 1/30th reliably--I try 1/15th often, but it's an adventure and I lose shots. So why did I manage the trick that one day? I have no idea, except that the gods are imps! So my "test" was meaningless and I never repeated it. It "proved" I could do something I can't! <g> --Mike P.S. Danny, many thanks for answering my question about the 40/M6!