Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mike wrote in part "Assuming that "suitable material and technique" means a more-or-less 100-speed film and a tripod, and presuming that one intends to end up with 16x20 enlargements (12X is 18 inches in the long dimension, or full-frame on 16x20 paper with a 1-inch border), my question would be: why not prefer a Hasselblad or a 4x5?" This is the classical but fallacious response when one tries to document the optical quality of Leica lenses and their capacity for high image quality. First of all I am not trying to establish the suitability or superiority of one format versus another one. I myself have more than once discussed the limits of Leica for large format enlargements. And there is no doubt in my mind that grain for grain the 120mm or the sheet film will produce excellent image quality. BUT I have opted for Leica to have a small photographic instrument for taking pictures in all situations I deem suitable for recording on emulsion. And if I use my M6 with a 90mm APO at f/2 and 1/1000 of a second handheld with 100 ISO, I will equal the image quality of a Hasselblad with a 4/150. The Hassy is more expensive, much heavier and vastly user unfriendly for handheld shooting in a dynamic environment and a slide projector or enlarger is also more expensive and heavier. Tests show that the emulsion/filmplane in a Hasselblad is far from flat and even as curvy as the Rocky Mountains. The 2/90 apo gives me at 2 better image quality than the 4/150 at 4 and when stopping down the apo to 4 it surpasses the Hasselbald 4/150. So the question should not be: I a need a high quality 16x20 inch print: what format should I use? Of course one can ask: why not use the 120 roll-film or the 4x5 inch negatives if a big enlargement is required. But that is a solution looking for a problem. The question I asked myself is: I want to take pictures with the Leica M6 because I like the photographic style that this camera supports and I like to exploit the optical abilities of the Leica lenses. Where are my limits? That question I answered and if the Leica capabilities extend into Hasselblad territory, so what. Erwin