Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]First, I am not sure whether this statement is correct. From the fair amount of discussion of enlargers etc. on the list, I have the impression that a lot of people still use traditional processes. However, it is true that many people (myself included) use a good-quality film scanner and output on a good inkjet printer (or dye-sub or whatever). Do those prints do justice to the Leica lenses? One can argue about it forever. Personally, I do not doubt that a skilled darkroom printer will be able to make a better print from one of my Leica negatives or slides than I make on the computer. However, *I* am not a skilled darkroom printer (I know what to do, but I simply do not have the time nor the inclination to lock myself up in the basement for hours), and I can make a better print on the computer than in the tray. My computer prints are pretty darn good, as some LUGgers who have seen them can attest. And if I want to have a traditional print made, I can take the computer print, go to a professional lab, and ask them to make a print similar in tone, cropping etc. to the computer print. In fact, I am having two prints made in this way this week, to give as a present to someone. So traditional and computer-assisted processes can happily co-exist. As for your statement about Leica deliberately dropping the quality of its lenses in the 60s, do you have any documentation for this? When I read for example Erwin Puts's pages, I get the picture of a steady progression in optical design. Which lenses that were introduced in that decade are of a lower quality than their predecessors? Nathan DonjR43198@aol.com wrote, in part: > Someone posted a message advising that the great majority of Leica "prints" > are "scanned" rather than enlarger printed. Could some of those who are > "scanning" their prints enlighten us in regard to the quality provided by > "scanning" versus prints from Tech Pan or Kodachrome negatives enlarged using > Focomats, Durst L1200's or other really good enlargers with APO enlarging > lenses. It may be that "scanning" does not do justice to high quality camera > equipment so there is no need for Leica to provide equipment that so awesome > that prints and slides from Leica equipment is discernible with the eye from > the equipment of other manufacturers. As I recall, during the early 60's > Leica had a vision that photographers were becoming very lazy and preferred > to have the corner drug store process and print Kodacolor so the resolution > of the lenses was dropped to enable the contrast level to be increased since > contrast, not resolution, was the ticket for Kodacolor. Maybe this > cheapening of the manufacturing process is the natural progression of this > march toward mediocrity. - -- Nathan Wajsman Overijse, Belgium General photo page: http://members.tripod.com/belgiangator/index.html Belgium photo page: http://member.xoom.com/wajsman/index.htm Motorcycle page: http://www.geocities.com/motorcity/downs/1704/index.html