Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Johnny Deadman wrote: > > > Beaumant Newhall describes (in his autobiography, 'Focus') a lovely cafe > > scene where he was with H.C-B and without looking at his camera the > > exposure and focus were set for a portrait of someone across the tables. In > > an instant the scene was recorded because H.C-B knew what the exposure > > would need to be and he knew how to prefocus his camera, these are the > > techniques of a craft which are sadly not learnt by a modern generation of > > photographers. > > This is not such a pipe dream, actually. If I was shooting with an M I would > automatically set it for the ballpark exposure when I went into a new > lighting situation eg the cafe. It would then be easy to focus according to > scale ("without looking at the camera" is IMHO perhaps a slight > exagerration). I have some very nice pictures taken in exactly this way. > Important to be using a 35mm or wider lens, as the framing is pretty hit and > miss. > > -- > Johnny Deadman > I would add that my street technique includes setting aperture and shutter by feel. That short space of 1/50 between 1/30 and 1/60 is a good reference point. Aperture is set by counting whole or half-stop clicks from wide open or stopped down. Focus is also set by knowing how the tab position of a 35 Summicron corresponds to subject distance and moving it accordingly. - -- Carl Socolow http://members.tripod.com/SocPhoto/