Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I was reading a book by Jim Zuckerman on natural-light photography, and he says that there's no harm in shooting directly into the sun. Now, he is using a Mamiya MF camera, and something tells me that this advice does not apply to a Leica M6. With a rubber shutter curtain and no mirror to deflect incoming light, it seems to me that even a brief exposure to direct sunlight could burn a hole into the curtain. Is this correct? I usually keep my lenses covered when I'm not actually shooting, and I always take care to aim them away from the sun when they are uncovered. I even do this on SLRs, since, even if the sun is deflected from the film gate by a mirror, there is still the risk of damage to CCDs for autofocus or metering. I find it hard to believe that a camera could be truly oblivious to direct sunlight coming into the lens. Is there something different about MF cameras that makes them immune to this. And, for that matter, how _does_ one shoot directly into the sun with a Leica, given this risk of damaging the interior of the camera? -- Anthony