Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/08/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 5:02 PM -0400 8/4/03, Afterswift@aol.com wrote: >In a message dated 8/4/03 1:50:40 PM Pacific Daylight Time, >bdcolen@earthlink.net writes: > >> But the question is why you put half the thought into your digital >> shots. My point is that comes from your view of digital as not being >> "real." Turn off autoeverything and shoot your digital camera the way >> you'd shoot an M. >----------------------------------------- >I'm now doing just what you suggest. I've set my 5050 at 1/250 for field work >and I'm trying to work with it as I do with my M3. The nature of the Olympus >5050 is such that it resembles a view camera in some ways and a PS in others. >Since the 5050 has a zoom lens and my M3 uses separate lenses, part of the >extra time involves switching between lenses -- and deciding to do >that. I made >sure that the 5050 would have an optical finder, closely related to the finder >in the M and CL. I'm still in the learning process. But certain differences in >approach between film and digital are becoming obvious. The M is much faster >and responsive in actually making the exposure. Leica lenses are needle sharp. >Shooting B&W with a Leica is the real thing. In a digital you're still >playing with color inside the circuitry. And a digital is 100% >dependent on battery >power. Now and forever. > >Best, >br Film cameras are 100% dependent on film, which in almost all cases takes up more room than batteries. The only point you make which has any real validity is that there are no decent B&W digital cameras nor off the shelf B&W photo printers. The M is faster than other film cameras as well, especially P&S film cameras. Many lenses are wonderfully 'sharp'; most professional lenses are 'sharper' than our usual technique can make use of. P&S lenses, whether film or digital, are not so hot. The lag time issue exists, but it also exists in P&S film cameras, and to a lesser extent in DSLR's. Some digicams, that are simpler and have a short lag time as their design goal, have about the same lag time as a Leica M. - -- * Henning J. Wulff /|\ Wulff Photography & Design /###\ mailto:henningw@archiphoto.com |[ ]| http://www.archiphoto.com - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html