Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/02/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]What a really great insight into the workings of a true pro! Gerry Ted Grant wrote: > Hi Guys & Gals, > I realize we had conversation on birthing in the past, so be it, simply > because every birth is different despite what some of you may think, I > thought there maybe something from this one! ;-) Please try to not > complain about the topic coming up again, as you may just learn something, > besides this is about "using Leicas!" Not talking about them. ;-) > > Yesterday spent 8 hours in a birthing room: Neopan 1600 & Delta 400, 2 > R8's - 2 M6's. > 15 mm Voigtlander, 28 mm 2.8, M&R, Noctilux f. 1.0, 80 R 1.4, no twinkie > light! ;-) > > 14 rolls later, an aching old bod, very tired legs, headache, hungry and > thirsty! I went home and crashed! Hey come on, the mom isn't the only one > who gets tired in these things. ;-) > > I wasn't standing around doing nothing, as I was shooting the little nuances > during a birthing, you know the nurse carrying out various things, the > husband holding the mother to be's hand or caressing her brow. It was > standing there, however it was a camera always at the ready in hand and > watching every little thing going on. Mother's facial expressions as a > contraction began, me waiting camera to eye for a particular expression. > > Not only that, there is a kind of "mental strain" of staying absolutely > alert and not falling into a "bored mode!" I over come this by locking all > body senses into neutral, relaxing and forcing a complete visual > concentration of "high vision reaction time." > > If you do this, much like covering the Olympics where you have absolutely no > control over the time, I clear my mind of anything but, "I'm here until > everything is over" it's much easier to cope. You can't be standing there > looking at your watch entertaining any thoughts of, "when the hell is this > going to be over?" Simply because, it's over when it's over and the baby > starts hollering!! ;-) > > As the afternoon dragged into evening, the lighting became worse, loosing > daylight from the window. To make things worse, the duty nurse turned the > soft room lighting down to softer. Like how about ASA1600 at 1/8th and > 1/15th at 1.4 and 1! Talk about "real available darkness!" And some with the > 28 at 1/4! > > The R8's were used similarly to the M6. It means you concentrate on the > camera handling at the moment of release more so than one might when shutter > speeds are higher. Do I expect to have "squigglys?" Yep, no doubt about it, > no one is 100% perfect at those shutter speeds. What one hopes for, a > squiggly isn't on one of the "good ones!" > > To cover this kind of event when you have no idea what the time will take, I > do the following to make it easier on oneself. > > Do not drink a lot of liquid before you start! Wear very comfortable shoes > and clothes, the kind you can get out of in a hurry if the patient is moved > to the OR and you must change to OR garb. Loose clothing is best, no neck > ties or constraining clothing, a small bag of raisins in the camera bag to > keep the hungrys away. > > Stay relaxed at all times, you ain't going anywhere! Don't take the doctor > or nurses word that ":nothing is going to happen for some time!" It's > Murphy's law, that if you leave for a coffee or food.... the baby will > automatically know you've left and arrive while your away! If you stay ... > the little son of a gun will take for ever, just as the doctor told you!" > Trust me the bambino knows you are out there waiting! :-) or not! ;-) > > Take lots of film and avoid at all costs running out of frames on all 4 > cameras at exactly the same time! Very bad scene trying to re-load in a > panic when everything is happening! Just like covering the Olympics keep an > eye at how many frames are left on each camera to avoid this. > > Bottom line? Stay cool and relaxed! The end results will be better if you do > and the proof of how well you did will be when the film is developed. > > Oh yeah and a shoot like this always reminds me of how bad a physical shape > I'm getting into! Whomever said the "Golden Years are great,was an idiot!" > :-) > > There you go eh? Piece of cake. Hopefully you learned something. ;-) > ted > > Ted Grant Photography Limited > www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant