Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]G'day all, With true-grit and determination, [and a long weekend at home raining], I've caught up with the LUG. You guys are churning out the e-Mail at a rate that keeps one from writing ;-). Some overall comments; The Noctilux is good in hand to hand combat, and I presume that is why they made such a heavy lens for low light work, and the seedier times of day. Think of the cost as "protection" money. Alf has another convert in Japan. These stark dark and disturbing urban images from a Leica newbie are worth a visit. This is street photography of the street not the people, but the use of line/space and composition impressed me as did the textures rendered especially by the Hektor lenses. http://member.nifty.ne.jp/ALCHEMIST/index.html To paraphrase Ted; When you photograph people in colour, you photograph their clothes, but when you photograph in B/W its best to take the clothes away. Older series M users, [I hoped he meant older series, not the older users of M series] include Mr HCB, who would estimate light from experience. My comments on this are that it is quite achievable in day light with forgiving colour film. I ran a trial at Soverign Hill several months ago [it was still warm] using my IIIf and the new Z2X, as point and shoot cameras. With the Z2x I composed and fired, letting the camera "do it all" and with the IIIf, I estimated the exposure, and distance, set the camera and fired off as soon as it was composed. The beauty of the bright line finder [in this case the finder] is that there are no distractions to compostion. If one has set the correct exposure and distance to the subject, and paid some due to DOF, the IIIf is faster, and when the results returned, the IIIf won hands down. On a roll of 36, almost no dud exposures or mis guesstimates on distance versus several wasted frames from the Z2x due to exposure cock up or focus failure. One day, I'd love to do the same experiment with a modern Autofocus Nikon or Canon. I one advantage the electronic thing has is a very nicely balanced fill in flash, but it chews through the batteries at a great rate if you use it ;-) I should add, that I had practiced hard to estimate distance and light in the preceeding weeks, but the results were unquestionable --- some really good keepers from the older camera, and few from the newer. Now I've learn't to appreciate the limitations of the Z2X, I've improved its output considerably, but there is more to learn and appreciate with the newer camera if you want good snaps than there is to learn on the older one. Alf wanted to know why one might choose the electronic R8 over the R6. One explanation given to me was the intermittent shutter speeds, which allows one to make full use of the wide open facility of new Leica lenes. [of course if you do not like the newer lenes, then ---- ]. The R6 will occasionally insist that you stop down a little, as you cannot vary your shutter speed range by half stops. A bit pedantic, but then that is what many of us Leica users are all about a--- retentive to the extreme ;-) My definition of a pro photographer would be one who is "accepted" as such by his peers or the photographic community. In Australia, you can be a "native", if the indigenous community accepts you as such. This seems to me to be quite civil. Keep those cards and letters coming. Cheers Alastair Firkin, http://users.netconnect.com.au/~firkin/AGFhmpg.html