Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 1/8/00 1:31:50 PM, michaeljohnston@ameritech.net writes: << More to the point is that tying yourself to the use of a tripod is going to prevent you from taking the kind of pictures that 35mm is best suited for. What are you going to take pictures OF? Static or posed subjects. If you're going to be limited to that anyway, then why in the world would you saddle yourself with the quality limitations of a tiny piece of film?? It makes little sense. >> I like handheld on-the-fly photography as much as the next guy but if this weren't such a family oriented discussion group I would be tempted to say this comment is absolute horse puck . . . but since we're so polite here, I'll refrain. It's one thing if you're talking about the stereotype photo geek who keeps his camera on the tripod to shoot everything -- even in bright sun -- it's something else altogether if you're dismissing the use of a tripod as an occasional but essential tool. When I go do a story I end up shooting in all sorts of situations. I go with one bag of equipment and try to be prepared for ANYTHING. I'm not like a National Geographic photographer who needs a couple of trucks and a few Sherpas to haul all his stuff. So for me, 35mm is IT for most situations. Occasionally there are times I use a tripod. Some recent examples come to mind . . . . * Shooting 100 ASA film indoors with available light and filtered lenses (I'm sorry but I don't use fast color unless I absolutely have to). Although I was shooting people, camera shake was a greater concern than subject motion --the tabletop tripod was sufficient. * An overall shot of a large building interior when a little depth of field was appropriate. Yeah I could pull it off handheld with B&W but the 100 speed color required a tripod * A light streak photo of cars leaving a military base at dusk shot with a 300 lens (4-8 second exposure) for a story on a base expansion. Yeah, I could have shot this on MF but we don't have a 300mm equivalent for our MF * A photo showing a panel discussion with each "head" sharp -- made shooting from the side with a 180mm lens stopped down to about 11 and shot at 1/8 of a second. Can you handhold a 180mm at 1/8? A tripod is lifesaver in MANY situations. It matters not that you shoot 35mm. Being able to slow down the shutter allows you to use better film and gives you depth of field options that you wouldn't otherwise have. I know the approach of many in this group is to just buy a f1.0 lens and shoot wide open but so often, editorially, that approach doesn't cut it -- "That dog won't hunt" is how we say it around here. To refuse to use a tripod is like saying I won't use any shutter speeds slower than 1/15 (or even higher with a longer lens). It makes no sense. Bob