Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/08/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This reply relates to 21 mm, but I guess it applies to 24 mm too, more or less. I recently photographed a glass with very fizzy mineral water on a beach café table with the beach in the background and the setting sun backlighting the sparkels in the glass. The glass was about a yard away from my M6. I noticed that the backlight effect on the water bubbles disappeared when I moved the camera up and down ever so little. My first shots were with the effect shown clearly in the viewfinder, but for the rest I moved the camera just that much I thought would be necessary to place the lens in the position of the viewfinder when I saw the backlight effect. Some of the negatives turned out really flat, others looked tri-dimensional with the airbubbles swimming in the water. Guess which were which? I had taken similar photos some years ago when I used a SLR. SLR is easy for that. If you have one, check the effect of moving the camera just an inch up or down. (OK your problems is a horizontal move, rather than a vertical, and there the M6 finder vs lens difference is smaller, but existing) Chris >To anyone using 24mm for your M6: > >I'm wondering if you have ever experienced a problem with composition that >compares to one I have recently experienced? >I recently composed a shot in the cabin of a small fishing boat. I framed >the shot using the clip on viewfinder. The skipper was in the foreground >looking through the cabin window. Through the window was another boat which >I centered up in the window which the skipper was looking through. >However, when the contacts were developed I found to my surprise that the >boat seen through the window in the background was not centered in the >window as I had composed it. The boat was in fact mostly blocked out by the >skipper who was in the foreground. >i.e. I seem to have experienced a problem when composing with the 24mm on >the new M6 ttl. What's in the clip on viewfinder is not always what's on >the neg! I'm quite worried about this and I will be running some tests on >this. It seems that the foreground can eclipse the background....... I >should add that the camera was also held 'sideways' for this shot. > >Barry Dinan >________________________________________________________________________ >Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com - -- Christer Almqvist D-20255 Hamburg, Germany and/or F-50590 Regnéville-sur-Mer, France