Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Erwin, you have done it again. In one fell swoop, you have put the LUG completely back on track and put our minds to work. I will indeed post a response (maybe several) to your post, but it will take time. Thanks Erwin. This is indeed what we should be thinking about. Jim At 01:06 PM 6/21/98 +0200, you wrote: >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. >