Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/10/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Saturday, October 25, 2003, at 01:44 PM, B. D. Colen wrote: > This suggestion that you need an M or people will freak out and point > at > your camera is such horseshit people who claim it should be required to > clean up after themselves with a shovel. Yes, the M's a wonderful Of course you can shoot people candids with almost any kind of camera - duh - but my earlier point was that shooting in v.low light, hand-held, is a huge stretch for the current crop of DSLRs. Hell it's a stretch for even a film SLR. v.Hard to focus in v.low light. Hard to hold the camera steady with its flipping mirror. Hard to remain inconspicuous when a current high-end DSLR is still the size of a washing-machine. Looking at your URL eg (subtitled "Blundering Clumsiness by a Cowardly Photographer" I presume), which was taken an well-lit subway train - the validity of my point still holds. f2.8 at 1/15th at 800 ISO is pretty easy for any camera. Now try f2 at 1/2 at 1600 ISO. (That's a 5 stop difference mate.) > in hospital rooms, delivery rooms, churches, at private > dinners in family homes Yeah well - you probably had prior, written, permission to shoot in all these locations. In which case you could have even used a 11x14 view-camera and not bothered anyone. But here's an exercise for you however. Walk away from the keyboard for a while and go down to a local department store. Don't ask for permission, just start photographing. (1) it's usually quite dark in there and (2) dept. store staff are really hostile towards photographers. After a few "interesting experiences" I think you will slowly realize that DSLRs aren't as inconspicuous or low-light capable as you once liked to imagine. :?) Andrew N. nemeng.com (Who somehow managed to contribute to this thread without quoting every single reply ever posted...) - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html