Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/09/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I'm spending time that should be spent either in the darkroom or taking pictures, in sharing a few random thoughts on photography. I'm an amateur, but perhaps not a totally rank one. I've always processed my own stuff (Kodachrome excepted, of course) ever since I was a high-school kid, and I'm now 79. Most of the time, when doing landscape stuff, I've been too damn lazy to lug around a tripod. Every now and then, it gets on my conscience, and I bring out the tripod. I remember the first time I did this--well, it couldn't really be the first time, but it's the first time I clearly remember. It was at Point Lobos, in California. My clear recollection was, in part, embarrassment; there were other people in the vicinity, and here I was pretending to be a real photographer. The next recollection was deliberation. I would peer through the viewfinder of this SLR. I would ask my wife to take a look. I would reframe the picture by what was probably no more than foot or so out at the object plane--a silly thing to do since it was negative film and I would be cropping in the enlarger anyway. The only point was that it forced me to think about what I was doing. To a slight extent, the same thing is happening now when I hand-hold the M6. I am so in awe of this piece of machinery that I finally own that I feel the picture I am about to take must be worthy of it. :-) The other thing I want to share is at the opposite extreme: fast shooting. The technique is not new to me, just forgotten until it was described in the LUG. A few weeks ago, I had the Olympus Stylus Epic in my pocket when in a busy outdoor market. I took a few photos. I was very conscious that this damn camera wants to think for me, so I carefully put it in spot focus mode and carried it with the cover open so as not to cancel the mode. In the moment it took to make sure that the cross-hair was on my subject when I locked the focus and exposure, the sales girl behind one counter cried: "Don't take my picture." I took this to heart when I took the M6 to an even busier street fair the next week. I simply took two meter readings, one in the sun and one in the shade and memorized the two aperture settings. I set the focus at ten feet. Again, I was using a 35mm lens. The camera went up to my face and down again so quickly, when necessary, that the subjects didn't have time to react. As far as I can tell, I wasn't noticed. Of course, on the few shots where I was photographing a performer, I took my time. Herb