Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 12:42 AM 6/1/99 -0300, you wrote: >Some days ago a friend of mine asked me about the leica equipment used by >Sebastiao Salgado. I knew that he used both M and R systems but I have no >info about the lenses. According to his photos he seems to respect HCB >tradition and to avoid extreme focal distances (no 28, no 200mm) Does >anybody have further information not only about the Focal distances but also >about the lens models? > >Thanks >carlos Here is what Salgado said in an interview by Mark Harris in the November, 1992, issue of Camera and Darkroom: SS: I carry my film in a backpack that can handle around 220 rolls of film, enough for two or three months. I use the old plastic boxes for slides to store the film. I put nine boxes of five rolls per row, and there are five rows. I used to roll my own film, but not anymore. I shoot Tri-X and now this fantastic film, T-Max 3200. Shooting indoors and in low-light istuations with it is marvelous. I now have the perfect freedom of movement for a photographer. I can shoot inside and outside in the same way. I've pushed this film to 12,800 before. It's a great film. C&D: What type of camera equipment do you bring with you? SS: Ninety-five percent of the time I use 28mm, 35mm and 60mm lenses mounted on three Leica bodies. I don't like to change lenses. I know these cameras and my film like the lines of my hand. C&D: What about a flash? SS: I had a small flash a few years ago until they came out with the T-Max 3200. It was a Vivitar 283. I never work with a flash anymore or with formats other than 35mm. C&D: Do you still shoot color? SS: Many years ago it was necessary, because it was not possible for me to make a living shooting only black-and-white. But once it was possible to live on my black-and-white, I stopped shooting color. I don't see the world in color. I don't pay attention to color and that's not good if you're shooting in color. There are many photographers that shoot color well, but it's not for me. C&D: What does black-and-white do for you that color doesn't? SS: It's quieter, subtler. Since I work a lot in the darkroom, I can reproduce what I felt while I was shooting. Color is too real, too crude. Black and white allows you to have a degree of imagination. This is a very good interview, ten pages long with photos. None of my Leica books list a 60mm lens. There was a 65 that was discontinued. Does anybody know anything about the 60mm lens? Leically, Tina Tina Manley, ASMP http://www.tinamanley.com/