Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/02/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Harrison, Many thanks for the detailed answer. We are (at least I am) very very interested in what other LUGgers do and how they do it. Even if it's mundane to you, it's very interesting to me. I like it very much when you, Donal, Ted, Ian, Eric, etc... tell about a particular shoot, or other work related stuff. It breaks the monotony of reading about lens shade numbers, OOKYS, NOOKYS, and the like. Thanks again, Jim > >>Out of curiosity, why do you have >>a grip on your camera and also want mirror release (I'm assuming on a >>tripod)? > >Well, I do just about every kind of photography you can think of. The >company I am a staff photographer for does the Tennessee Vacation Guide, >the North Carolina Travel Guide, both travel scenic photography stuff. >The Tennessee Economic Development Guide, Kentucky Commerce; both high in >corporate/industrial stuff where color correction gels and longish >exposures rule the day. We also do 2 NASCAR magazines, 1 NFL magazine >where sports action shots rule. In addition to this we do about 30 >smaller community magazines where I shoot everything from sports to >people working on computers where I drag the shutter speed to pick up the >monitor, to scenic stuff, all in 2-3 days. On top of this I am a Black >Star shooter where I will go from doing an environmental portrait for say >the Family Circle or The Chronicle of Higher Education to shooting an 18 >wheeler painted with special paint on the Interstate for Dupont the next >day. About 2/3 of what I shoot is hand held, the rest is on a tripod and >it is my opinion that the R6 is difficult to handhold with out the grip. > >Donal, Bill Welch, Bill Grimwood, and Kim Sherman have all seen some of >the magazines we produce and perhaps they can clarify what I am trying to >say. Since I will go from shooting something as I am on the fly hand >held at good shutter speeds to a longish shot on a tripod, sometimes with >only the time it takes to walk down the hall to a different location, I >like to keep my equipment versatile. Having to remove the grip to use >the mirror prefire just is not to bloody versatile...IMO > >Long answer for a short question, I know. > > > >Harrison McClary >http://people.delphi.com/hmphoto >