Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]ULF SJÖGREN wrote to me on my home page, and I thought the discussion of photo philosophy might entertain in the sea of red dots ;-) XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX> As I wrote in the previous mail I do like your pictures from NO. some more than others (of course). Light, technique and motives or good, in some pictures excellent. But after a while I found something that made me wonder...... In many pictures you are too distant >from the interesting part of the picture. You haven't followed the old rule "one step closer". And now I wonder (as I have noticed this in my own nowadays very few 35mm pictures). Is this what happens when you change from medium format camera to 35 mm???. I mean you are used to the bigger focusing screen, and -what I think is the most important fact - longer lenses and another fact is the relations between width and heght. 1:1 or 3:4 IS different from 2:3. Look at yor pictures with "square eyes".and then tell me your opinion. Kindest regards Ulf Sjögren swe. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX This is great. I really love critics. Now your comments that I'm not in close enough are interesting, as it is a long time critisism of my own. I've tried to be "better" at taking one step closer, and chatting to locals. In this respect, I think I have succeeded with the woman and her dog on the cafe seats, the boy with the pig, the bar scene [with out intruding] the parrot and cocky etc. The night painter was taken to have the blurred people leaving the image, and deliberately further away and the buskers were taken with a 21, so I was almost sitting in their laps. The smokers in pink - well this was the best I could do and yes I wish I could have got in closer on the 4 girls hamming it up on Bourbon St, but I had to grab the shot as fast as possible. Maybe they would have posed for me --- I should have tried. In reality you can never be in close enough. These images are the whole negative/slide except for the 4 girls [slightly cropped], and in part reflect the use of a rangefinder. The framing is not as important as the "decisive moment" for me, especially when I'm using the rangefinder. My people shots with the Rollei TLR are also pretty close [see the Egypt shots at the Rollei TLR club http://www2.magicalights.co.jp/dmakos/rolleitlr/index.html but that was 1994, and I would have tried to get in closer there as well now. Yes you can never be too close, but I think the M6 Leica is the best way to get in there, with all SLR's, I find the tendency to use a longer lens, especially with the noise of a Hasselblad. The M6 has an intimacy with the 35mm lens even if it does distort a little for a portrait. In this respect, I like the proximity that one feels in the portrait and yet the sense of background and place. Here I love using the superwides for some of my portraits: the 21 with the M6, the Rolleiwide, the 30 fisheye with the Hasselblad, and the 15 superelmar with the R8. As for going from square to oblong format, I believe there is quite an adjustment to make. I like the neutrality of the square, but many people "hate" it. 35mm for me is better often in a vertical format and yet displaying vertical images is harder especially on the www. The new panorama images of the X-pan provided and even greater challenge in format switching, but one I've really enjoyed. As I state in my review of the X-Pan however, it is far too slow to ever replace the M6 as the rangefinder of choice in that decisive moment ;-) Cheers Alastair Firkin http://users.netconnect.com.au/~firkin/AGFhmpg.html