Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/05/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On lundi 24 mai 1999 5:25, Jim Brick [SMTP:jim@brick.org] wrote: > ....snip.... > We've discussed "Leica Glow" and "Bokeh". I believe the "ethereal" > qualities of Leica images are much deeper than what simply meets the eye. I > believe good Leica images have a feeling. They have music. This is why "I > like using Leica lenses," All others need not apply. Jim, Good images have a feeling, they sometimes have music, I agree. Cosina or Leica, Canon or Sigma, Zeiss or Minolta or whatever. Most photographers will develop a very personal relationship with the hardware items that have helped them produce those 'musical images'. I do not believe there is such a thing as an objective 'Leica glow', but I believe there is such a thing as photographic talent and know-how. You seem to be getting a real kick with the images you have produced using Leica hardware in the last few years, and that's great. I can therefore fully understand why you would not want to experiment with anything else in the 35mm field. It would be a waste of time, and it would (re)introduce elements of insecurity in your creative process. But exactly the same words as those you have used are pronounced by a vast array of happy talented photographers using a vast array of other hardware. A visit on other lists will illustrate this. An eye on the dozens of great images one is exposed to every day shows that there is no hardware monopoly on 'deep', 'musical', images. It is therefore perfectly understandable to me that photographers who are still searching for their own styles, angles, personal vision, or trying to renew them, are happy trying out new hardware items from many suppliers in a financially less committed way than buying exclusively the latest from Leica (or Hasselblad or Alpa, etc). The 15mm Bessa is the perfect example of a very desirable piece of hardware for people who would like to experiment with ultra-wides while using the bodies and shooting behaviour they are accustomed with. The very compact and capable 28mm sm Ricoh is also a perfectly understandable choice for someone who would want to dip a modern toe in RFsystems or for someone who primarly uses a screw mount system. Which does not necessarily imply Leica. So, I do not converge with your repeated puzzlement on those matters. May I add that, judging from the info you posted here, you seem to have chosen a photographic style very much focused on landscapes and still subjects. You seem to generally use a heavy tripod and to favor high resolution films (the handheld 75mm summilux tulip with E200 seems like an exception, no ?). This behaviour, when mastered with talent, will end up with brilliant images. Most high end travel magazines publish brilliant non-Leica landscapes. Your shooting pattern helps you get the best possible imaging performances from the marginally superior hardware you are using. You are therefore in a position to squeeze the very best reproduction capabilities from 35mm emulsion, and your trained eyes might even detect an improvement on your large Ilfochromes that would originate in the lens you used rather than in the tripod, the film, the composition, the exposure settings or the enlargement lab. I sincerely believe most of us are not in that position and have no wish to choose the same photographic subject matter as you. I think the Leica hardware I am using is an overkill for my style of photography. I love using it though, and feel absolutely secured (and often humbled) by knowing that failure in a picture will never be hardware related. But, objectively, a large percentage of my good Leica pictures could have been shot with a 2nd hand 50 USD Cosina SLR with 2nd hand PK mount fixed lenses. I am really looking forward to using some of those rogue new lenses. Might even buy a sm body for them... Alan