Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/02/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Precisely. In the old days, I used to carry 3 bodies around when I felt I wanted to cover such eventualities, with different films and speeds - now I need just one. What Ted said is very true - it's ultimately more satisfying to combat very low light with film, and low light performance is the key reason I've historically used rangefinders, and thus Leicas - but it's just so much easier with digital. It's almost like magic. Nick --- Frank Dernie <Frank.Dernie@btinternet.com> wrote: > I agree Emanuel, I find that one of the big > advantages of digital is > the ability to change "ASA" on the fly. It was > brilliant when I went > on holiday with my Canon D30 in Spain, the first > time for me with > digital. Outside the light was vicious and I was > visiting castles and > monasteries in the region. The crypt and castle > pictures at max > sensitivity were by miles the best I had ever taken > in low light and > when I emerged back to 100ASA. Too long on > Kodachrome 64 to -need- > fast speeds but when you do this is where digital > shines. > Frank > writing this has made me go back and look at those > 2002 pictures - > thanks for reminding me ;-) ___________________________________________________________ Win a BlackBerry device from O2 with Yahoo!. Enter now. http://www.yahoo.co.uk/blackberry