Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/08/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Leica Digilux Zoom epiphany. I just returned from a family vacation in Scandinavia. My first act on returning was to cancel my appointment for a skeletal adjustment with my local chiropractor. For this trip I carried a Digilux Zoom as my complete photographic armamentarium Instead of lugging around a half dozen kilos of assorted Leica cameras and lenses. It was both an eye opening as well as spine saving experience. In prior trips, both as a photojournalist and as a tourist, I followed the photographic philosophy of excellence. I took the best equipment and film my budget would allow, hoping for those superb pictures that would make editors drool, contest judges swoon, and my wife allow me to enlarge to 2 x 3 feet and place on the living room wall. My success ratio with the latter category was quite small. Most of my prints and slides ended up in shoe boxes or press files, to be pulled out and viewed on rare occasions. This time I was determined to use my camera only as an aide memoir. I took only my recently acquired Leica Digilux Zoom and left everything else home. The logic was fairly straightforward. Scenes along the Norway coast had been oft photographed in better weather than I was apt to encounter. It was unlikely that I would get enough saleable pictures to pay for any reasonable fraction of the trip. Second, I hoped to send a lot of the photos to my children to show them what their mother's childhood homeland looked like. In the past this would have meant having a lot of 4" x 6" pics printed up at the local K mart. The Digilux Zoom filled the job nicely. In a couple of weeks I took over 600 photos of every aspect of a trip to Iceland, Norway and Denmark. All fitted nicely on a few large capacity SmartMedia cards. Every night I reviewed the pictures of the day on the camera display and erased the dogs, regaining their space on the media. On my return I transfered the pictures to my iMac. Those that needed adjustment or cropping were massaged by Photoshop. In a few hours I had a complete slideshow which could be viewed on a TV screen or the computer monitor. The pics were burned onto CD-roms in both Mac and PC formats for the kids (all of whom are computer savvy). The resulting pictures, while not up to paper print standards, are as good as the display media will permit. The TV images rival those of commercial television. The CD-rom images display clearly and sharply with no visible artifacts at 6" x 9" on the computer monitor. The costs were more than reasonable. Film and processing for the equivalent number of conventional pictures would have been over $300. I would have paid at least double that to get 5" x 7" prints to distribute. On the other hand the media costs of CD-roms come to less than one dollar for each 600 image disc. Now I'm not going to say that digital photography is better than silver based photography for all purposes but, judging by my experience, it certainly is the wave of the photographic future for the consumer. I have a lot of nice cameras and a small fortune invested in Leica equipment but as a user I may have to rethink my priorities. Larry Zeitlin