Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/11/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Horst, What is the name of the cafe ? I live in Melbourne and would love to see the prints. Regards, Tony Salce - ----- Original Message ----- From: "A.H.SCHMIDT" <horsts@primus.com.au> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Friday, November 03, 2000 2:58 PM Subject: [Leica] Horses for Courses > > A couple of weeks ago I picked up a repaired Leica lens. The guy who run the shop > also > did some Photographic work for a couple of advertising agencies. We got talking and > he showed me some of his work. He used only the best available equipment and the > resulting images showed it. One of the color prints. about 1.5m x 60cm (in landscape > form) > showed a City skyline with a great big airplane superimposed on to it. The print was > that sharp, you could see at the right upper edge looking out of a sky scraper > window, a bloke picking his nose. It was about the sharpest macro contrasity most > impressive print I had seen. I was just overwhelmed. After doing all the right aaahs > and oohs, I left and promptly forgot all about it. I see this guys work sometimes at > the airport terminals, when I arrive after a flight. I look at it, and worry if my > luggage arrived. > > > Last week my wife and I went to a small french cafe shop in the centre of Melbourne. > Inside on the walls where about 40 or so prints by Henri Cartier Bresson. Looking at > this prints, and you could not help it, made me feel like I was somewhere in France. > At times in the country and at times in the city. Now, this guy used photographic > equipment > which, by the modern technocrats would be knocked and despised as old and unusable. > When looking at this prints, at no time was I overcome by the urge to go with my > magnifying glass to check if the edge sharpness was up to scratch. Nor did I see > anybody else rushing over to do this. The images made you look at the relevant > area. They where full of feeling and haven't left my mind since I saw them. I really > believe, that if this pictures where taken with the latest 500000 lines/mm super > contrast apo-dapo lens, the result would have been less impressive. > > What I trying to say is: There is a place for all the different photographic > equipment. > > It depends what your needs are. I suppose for today's professional, it is a must to > have the latest and best equipment. The professional can not afford to take chances. > it is his lively hood. The professional in his spare time or the amateur (who of > course also likes to have the latest equipment if he can our could afford it) can > use existing, sometimes fairly old equipment and get results. Often the results don't > match up technically to the ones taken with the latest equipment. but if the motive > is good and the picture has the power to > impress, who cares if it is not technically perfect. By the way, who decides what is > technically perfect. > > The above was in no way intended to knock or belittle the latest lens or camera > performance. Not at all. The intention was to defend the notion, held by some, that > only the latest in technology is usable and all the rest is crapp and that only the > lines/mm count. > > I maintain, that I get a better and more pleasing print when taken with my (luckily > coated) Summar, than with the latest Summicron when shooting an extremely contrasty > scene. > Example: A bright sunny day in a forest when the sun comes from the side, or of an > Australian dusty dry country town. Try it and you may agree. On the other hand the > Summar can often not compare with an evening scene, taken wide open with the > Summicron. > > >