Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]From: <Ruralmopics@aol.com> Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 1999 15:09 Subject: Re: [Leica] Street shooting > I can't describe it but if a photographer goes to work > with little fanfare and complete ease with what he's > doing and his equipment the subject seems to settle > down much more quickly -- no matter what camera the > photographer is using. Maybe I take too long to shoot. By the time I'm satisfied with composition, focus, and exposure, the subject is usually looking my way, or somebody has noticed me. At least this has been the case with the Nikon. I take even longer to figure things out with the Leica (since it is all manual), but people seem to notice a lot less, for some reason. I consider that a Good Thing. Indeed, on several occasions lately I've loitered around the same spot, Leica in hand, for like an hour or so, and nobody even noticed. I kind of stayed off to one side and occasionally looked through the viewfinder to check the composition (with lots of people around, the right composition could be a while in coming). Also, with the Leica, I find that it is handy to be able to set up the focus (thanks to clearly-marked DOF indications) and exposure in advance, so that when the right moment comes, I just raise it to my eye and press the shutter. I suppose I could actually shoot from the hip, as some photographers apparently do, but I'm not that brave yet--I still need to get nice results doing it the standard way before I try to be Joe Cool. Still another advantage is that the camera makes so little noise that nobody ever realizes that I've taken a shot. Even my little Yashica P&S makes more noise, with its tiny motor drive for focus and film advance. Clearly, an M6 is extremely well suited to any situation requiring discretion without any compromise in quality. -- Anthony