Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/08/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I think digital is really cool except for all the things I don't really like about it :-) -1- I'm an amateur, and I've just joined this LUG list, and after shooting with a Bessa R for 6 months, I'm getting my first M body. New blood - yay! -2- I sort of consider Leica's as P&S cameras. Just really good ones and with manual controls. You know, "fast and small and available light and handheld" - stuff like that. The super high quality lenses are just needed to eek a decent image out of the teeny tiny piece of film. Versus the "real" MF and LF cameras - the serious stuff my artist buddy up in NY shoots with. -3- Re: digital, I just discovered the wonders of FP4+ souped in HC-110. Now I'm really excited about souping it in Rodinal for that certain look! I want alot of options and control. For now, I do scan and print digitally using MIS B&W inks, but I'm taking a wet printing class soon because the scanner CCD's limited dynamic range, weird grain sensitivity and all the rest just kind of sucks. -4- So having had a dose of the "digital darkroom," I'm not that impressed. For me, it's a ton of frustrating work. All sorts of weird tools. Remove the grain; whoops, add some back; now the detail is lost; ok, unsharp mask; that looks weird; adjust the curve; oh no, tons of ugly noise in the shadows; add contrast in the highlights, whoops just decimated the skin tones. Wait, those colors don't look like Velvia 50. Oh, that's a "hard to scan" film. Underdevelop all your B&W film for low contrast, "thin" negatives. Regular density just shows up as golf ball size grain. Ok, finally got it kinda right. But then the print! Oh calibrate and profile and calibrate again. Contrast, gamma, blah blah, blah. What a drag. Same negs hand printed as 5x7 "proof prints" at a good lab almost always look... better. -5- Digital? Oh, me first! I want an expensive APS camera :-) Why might I want to further shorten my dynamic range, film grain options, film/ccd size and so forth. Even more than the limited small 135 film format? It's already a compromise! So compromise even more with the purchase of a rather expensive, plastic electronics-laden camera that will be "obsolete" in 3 years or less? -6- Actually, I have an answer to this question. I AM going to go snag a D70 to learn more about flash. I know next to nothing about flash and lighting. I've already got a bunch of Nikon AF primes and an SB-800, so I figure the "quick turn around" of digital will make the D70 a good tool for screwing around with flash and lighting and learning that stuff. Once I get a handle on it, back to film for the real product. We'll see. -7- Also, I'm blessed/cursed to have made a career in high technology, so my closets are just teeming with crazy expensive electronic devices long rendered obsolete and mostly useless. Monitors, printers, early SCSI cards, expensive tape drives - I think I even have the first 10MB hard disk I bought back in the '80s somewhere. So another short half-life expensive electronic gadget doesn't really bother me all that much :-) -8- Ok, this is a little embarrassing for me to say, but my amateur goal is to create something that is truly beautiful. Something that combines craft and intellect, intention, feeling, mastery of a medium and maybe a little luck of the moment. I feel, or maybe fear, that there's a long road from here to there, but it's what makes me go out and take photographs (and practice jazz guitar, but that's for another mailing list). -9- With that goal in mind, I want some good tools. I also want tools that won't change much over time. After all, I want to master a medium, not continually chase an upgrade path. My Gibson L4 guitar works pretty much the way it did in the 1960's, and my new M body will work pretty much the same as it did in the 1950's (but with a meter). So long as someone keeps making a few decent black and white emulsions, I can master the tools and focus on the truly hard parts of reaching my creative goals. -10- Thanks to the good Lord and kind fortune, good tools are within my reach. I love their quality, the feel, the results - and the continuity of the design. I fully understand that folks more talented than I can and do produce works of beauty with all sorts of tools that they find either near at hand or appropriate to their mission (Baltimore's Visionary Art Museum is full of intriguing examples). And I am always amazed by those individuals who seem to master almost any new medium at will. But I am not made so. I happily chase new technology to earn my daily bread and profit from the constant change and churn. But for my more private, inner ambitions, I seek a medium that will change little over time. Hell, maybe I should just take up painting :-) Anyway, sorry for the long, long ramble, but the mood just hit. This is a really great list. Thanks all! Scott Tim Atherton wrote: >There certainly are a lot of photographers - pro and am - finally flogging >off their M's to get in on the digital rat race (though I'd be more likely >to sell mine off to buy a Super Symmar XL 110mm...) > >That said, in the few days since HCB went to the darkroom in the sky, I've >come across at least three photojournalists who had sold off their Ms in the >last year ("they sat in a cupboard and never got used") to go digital but >who, in various fits of photogrpahic nostalgia, watching all the HCB re-runs >on Charlie Rose and digging out all their HCB books, are now selling off >other camera gear to buy back their once beloved Ms and go shoot some Tri-X >or HP5... > > >tim > >_______________________________________________ >Leica Users Group. >See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > >