Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/10/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]JG wrote: >>Slight correction on what I wrote: >>They were also shooting B&W. Color has put new demands and strobe is on= e >>of the requirements as part of the process. >> >>Should and now reads: >>They were also shooting B&W. Color has put new demands and strobe is MO= RE >>OFTEN THAN NOT one of the requirements as part of the process.>>>>>>> Ted replied: >Naw, although you changed your wording mine stands regarding light. :) = A >photojournalist who understands light shoots colour the same as B&W. > >Actually shooting B&W is more difficult, as you only have 2 things going >for you: " Light and Content!" You don't have colours to take up the sl= ack >if you haven't made a good photograph. :) [...] >Sorry my friend it isn't the flash that motivates you to take pictures, >it's the light on the subject. Yes and there are some guys that are >magicians with flash fill and you don't know it's been done. However, th= ey >are few and far between. I think that this discussion on flash, which originated with an=20 equpipment discussion, has gotten really interesting. Maybe a good argument for the equipment talk - it sometimes transmogrifies into real conversations about real photographic (artistic) questions. In reply to both of the above comments, I would point to the work of William Albert Allard. Now, I should put my colors on my sleeve from the beginning. I think this guy does absolutely brilliant work. And his work is particularly germaine to this discussion because: (1) he is a Leica (R & M) user; (2) he shoots color exclusively, mainly=20 Kodachrome; (3) he is renowned for working in very marginal light;=20 and (4) he mostly works in available light (and is reputed to own summicron, summilux, AND noctilux 50's for his M), but he has also done a lot of *very* good location work with strobes. A number of=20 Allard's most effective pictures combine longish exposures in ambient light with minor flash illumination to partially freeze action.=20 While such pictures can sometimes be gimmicky, many times they=20 convey a mood and a sense of movement that can be obtained using=20 no other technique.=20 Allard's work provides strong examples which serve to refute both=20 the idea that flash is NECESSARY for professional color work, as=20 suggested by JG, and the idea that available light is NECESSARILY superior to flash, which is near to (but more extreme than) the=20 notion put forward by Ted. Now, back to the M6 TTL...=20 So is the M6 TTL a good idea? No! As so many of us have said, TTL=20 alone is not enough to justify modification - especially *any*=20 increase in size - of the M body. I will add one more vote to the chorus asking for retention of the unmodfied M6 and the *addition* of an electronic-shutter, polymer-frame, TTL meter and flash,=20 aperture-priority, motorized M with a hinged back. It should not cost more than $1500 US. Oh, yeah. The M7 should have a SECOND curtain flash sync, (the Konica Hexar does!) or - even better - a choice between first and second curtain sync. Such a camera=20 could offer a true MF challenge to the Contax G2, while retaining system compatibility with the existing M line. Comments? .......................................................................... Alexey Merz | URL: http://www.webcom.com/alexey | email: alexey@webcom.co= m | PGP public key: http://pgp5.ai.mit.edu/ | voice:503/494-684= 0 | "That pig. He eats french fries like I drink whiskey and=20 | smoke cigarettes. I don=92t begrudge him his fries, but he=20 | didn=92t offer to share them. It was beyond greed, the way = he | buried his face in this little red plastic basket. It=20 | shocked me." =97 Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, on Clin= ton