Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Some statistics make for interesting reflections. The photographic industry has consumed more silver this year than last year. The first positive conclusion might be: silver holds off the digital threat. But then it dawns: the mass market for silver is colour print area and here indeed we note higher figures. Black and white and Transparancy just hold or are slipping. The digital camera still and righly so is seen as a computer peripheral and has limited use and limited appeal. The essential advantage of silver based materials over the digital print is the image depth. Look at a carefully printed fiberbased paper and compare it with a very good digital print: the last one lacks depth and substance. APS now has 25% of the compact market and ever optimistic Fuji declares the 135 format dead within 4 years. Truth of the matter is that digital pictures and APS will carve away substantial portions of the 135 domain. We also see a surging interest in old pictures and a lively trade in second hand mechanical "classics". What relevance has this listing for Leica cameras and its use. The Leica has optics whose qualities are second to none and at this very moment are so evolved that a solid technique is needed to exploit these qualities. Shooting objects with fill-in flash on colour neg film is not the best way to make these optical qualities shine. The Leica also has picture taking qualities that define that style of photography that is sometimes referred to as the art of the snapshot. Here we need a keen eye on composition and a strong relation with our subjects in order to rise above the commonplace. The Leica then is an instrument, a tool and as every tool needs to be used in those circomstancs for which the tool has been designed. It is indicative of most LUG discussions that they are tool-oriented (which lens is best, which film etc). Quite often it has been stated (with a large part of merit) that in many picture taking situations the differences between Zeiss and Canon are small compared to Leica. That is true. There is a large intersection of photographic technique and subjects where the differences do not count. So why is the Leica in danger? The traditional scope of 35mm photography will shrink (se above APS and digital). But within this contracted domain the discerning characteristics of Leica photography will be progressively blurred unless the Leica users do what all businesses do today: reflect on basic qualities and exploit the core of their craft and expertise. Oddmund used a certain style of street photographuy and noted that a simple compact camera was all he needed and so stopped using the Leica (so he told us). That is a sensible act. If the tool is not correct for the job, than change the tool. The LUG may not be representative of the Leica users world wide. Still this group consists of highly loyal and dedicated Leica users. The discussion I would like to start would concentrate on what this group (especially the large silent majority) thinks are the real virtues of Leica photography and how or in what way Leica pictures are different from others. Most interesting however would be a discussion of technique. What techniques do Leica users prefer to get that most ephemeral of qualities: Leica quality. OR the other way around: what techniques should we use to get this quality. I for one never use film speeds above 100ISO, always Transparancy and B&W (zone system, yes) and as soon as the shutter speed drops below 1/125 a tripod is a must. If in low light situations and when circomstances demand handheld shooting I make at least 10 identical pictures (every one of them refocussed) to ensue exactt focus and control trembling hands.I always try to find a light direction that enhances contours and texture detail. Never use an aperture smaller than f/8.0 and preferably between 2,8 and 4. Etc Erwin.