Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/01/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted wrote, ?... to sell the Leicas is tantamount to selling your children! ;-)? Indeed, I experienced my own version of that feeling, ?either, or,? and went on to enhance my stable of Leicas. Why? I am 74 and began with a darkroom just after WW II. I photographed my family of five for twenty years with a 3.5 Rollei and inherited my dad?s M4s. I am a rank amateur and take pictures for the memories they provide; in addition, I enjoy the way Leicas feel, operate and endure. The arrival of digital photography put all that to question. My choice is not ?either, or? but is to continue to capture images on film because I have wonderful family negatives that are 80 years old, and some of mine from 50 years ago, all of which are likely to survive, but I am unsure of digital archiving. The second part of it is that I now digitize most of my frames to take advantage of three major advantages the digital world offers me: image manipulation, transmission, and distribution of prints, i.e.: -> image sorting, editing and home printing (for casual use) with my computer -> image display on monitors far and wide, via email and CDs, including QuickTime slide shows -> image printing and distribution on demand by uploading to digital photo printers I rejected ?either, or? by choosing the best of both worlds. One final piece remains, which I hope to acquire in the near future: a high quality color printing capability, via digital printing, a capability I?ve never had. I would never pretend that this arrangement might suit professionals or dedicated and perspicacious Leica fans such as LUG readers or those who prefer larger formats; it is simply my choice, fitting my 35 mm circumstances. One size, after all, does not fit all; it fits no one. Thank you for listening and for your comments, which I am confident you will offer freely. Bill