Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/09/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]le 04.09.2001 16:15, Mxsmanic à mxsmanic@hotmail.com a écrit : > Tarek writes: > >> My experience also goes for automatic cameras. > > My experience is that automatic cameras (at least those of professional > quality) > make decisions no worse than my own in a majority of situations, and often > considerably better. Computers in cameras don't take decisions as how to expose your picture. You do. Automatic exposure or not. That's probably why they invented AE lock et al. > >> 99% Wow! Fantastic. Great. I think it's more a >> 80/20 ratio. > > Your experience may differ. Nothing to do with experience. It's called the paretto (sp) principle. 80% of my equipment is used for 20% of my pictures and 20% of my equipment for 80% of my pictures. 20% of my clients account for 80% of my billing etc. etc. a very amusing principle I learned at a business seminar. Now you can use that to impress your friends. > >> BS. My Arca Swiss is not even a rangefinder >> and it's a damn good professional camera. > > I do not see the relevance of this. Neither do I, but I thought it sounded good. > >> You'll need a 1/16000 of a second to shoot >> at 2.8 with Tri-X rated at 400ISO ... > > No. Under typical daylight conditions, an extra stop is necessary. The most > common exposure for Provia 100F for me in daylight, for example, is f/8 at > 1/250, or one stop more than the Sunny-16 rule would imply. Sunny-16 applies > to > brilliantly sunlit subjects only. You must be one brilliantly sunlit subject. Wow! Where are my sunglasses? BTW I thought you relied on your brilliant computer to take decisions. Don't bother with thinking... > >> In my original post I suggested a ND filter... > > There is no ND filter built into the M. Amazing! Have you looked everywhere? > >> I wonder how they used to do it before F5's >> came out? Huh? Hey Anthony, how did they do >> it before? > > In many cases, they didn't. There are some techniques that can work under > some > conditions, such as prefocusing, but one notes that many sports photos seen > today simply were not taken at all decades ago. Sure thing. I knew a guy 15 years ago who specialised in cars. He had no AF cameras. Plain ole F1 with a few telephoto lenses. Great pictures. > >> Rewind and put in another roll. > > That is difficult to do in one or two seconds. > >> Or are you trying to tell me that you are so >> broke you can't afford to do that? > > I am pointing out the realities of taking pictures, although I find it odd > that > I must do so on a list nominally discussing photography. You create the reality you live. My reality doesn't include such situations. > >> Like when you're tired of focusing? > > Yes, or when you can't focus accurately or quickly enough for the > circumstances. > >> In my career I haven't encountered many >> situations like that. > > Then you have something yet to look forward to. >I have encountered such situations. Good for you > >> Speedy to me means they get the camera repaired >> before my next assignment ... > > That won't help you for your current assignment. How far apart are your > assignments? Sufficently. Besides I don't rely on one system only. >> If you can afford them and can carry them why not. > > Indeed. But many people cannot afford them, and many professional > photographers cannot justify the expense--in business, > you must justify expenses, rather than > simply spend money because it is on hand. I started my business with one camera and 20% of my earnings. It was obvious for me to invest in cameras, lenses and other stuff so that I could expand my business. Many people do this and it has nothing to with "just" spending money because it's on hand. >> I guess you still don't get it... I don't buy >> identical cameras ONLY because one could break. >> I actually use them. > > Then speaking of them as if you buy them only to protect against equipment > failure in the context of this discussion is misleading. I'm sorry if what I said was misleading. On the other hand I never said anything about how to use your equipment. I thought you were a pro who knew how to use two or three bodies with different lenses in order to save those precious seconds when you need to change films or lenses. > >> The original point was answering your statements ... > > I'm still waiting for the criteria applied by Leica to determine whether or > not > a photographer is "professional." I asked you about that several times, and > you > haven't answered.