Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/11/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Peter, That's a nice ad for monovision contacts. I'm glad it's working out for you. I doubt I would ever get contacts as my progressives are just fine, except for the scratched lenses with the older M bodies. Also I'm too old to change my ways now. You might like to look into a .58 body. I shoot a lot of 28mm and found it pretty impossible to correctly frame with the .72 viewfinder. I picked up a 28mm viewfinder and that was fine. When I got my Tri-Elmar, going back and forth between viewfinders was kind of a pain. Then my dealer got in a beautiful black .58 M7 and I picked it up. I love that camera. The 28mm frame is just right for me. I'm afraid my M6 and MP are being neglected. Sometimes I'll go out with just a 50 Summicron in which case any body is fine. Len On Nov 16, 2006, at 2:26 PM, Klein, Peter A wrote: > Tina: Sorry about your vision issues. It is indeed a royal pain. > I've > had to change glasses and contacts every year for the past few, as > I've > gone through the (ahem) transition period from my forties to fifties. > The only good thing about it is that I'm getting less nearsighted > as the > years go by. I can now read comfortably without glasses--which was > never the case before about 3 years ago. > > My solution has been a combination of glasses and monovision contacts. > The contacts have enabled me to avoid using two pairs of glasses at > work. They are also a boon for Leica shooting. > > Since I do a lot of computer work, I have both a pair of bifocals for > general use, and a pair of ordinary glasses for computer work (the > prescription for the latter is focused at arm's length for easy screen > reading). > > This is fine at home, but at work, I am constantly shuttling > between my > own computer, other people's, and servers. I hated having to carry > around two pairs of glasses (and cases), and constantly switching > between them. I ended up getting monovision contacts. My right > eye is > for distance, my left is for reading. This works most of the > time. It > took me a couple of months to get used to it, but now I'm very happy > with it. > > I supplemented the monovision contacts with a little trick I > figured out > myself. When I'm sitting at my own computer for any length of > time, or > for fine work, I use a pair of 1.25x reading glasses, from which I've > removed the left lens. This corrects my right eye for the screen, my > left eye is already corrected by the contacts, and all's well with the > world. Carrying around one pair of readers is a lot easier than > carrying two full-sized pairs of glasses. > > I don't wear the contacts on weekends or at night, unless I'm going to > go out shooting my Leica. My particular face shape and prescription > causes me to need more eye relief than most people. On a .72x > Leica, I > can see the entire 50mm frame at once, but I lose the edges of the > 35mm > frame. After I got contacts, I found myself using my 35mm lenses > more, > and I had to crop less. :-) > > When I'm out hiking, on vacation, or in places where I won't have easy > access to a clean rest room, I stick with the glasses. It avoids the > kind of trouble you got into with contacts in Central America. For > scenic shots, it's no problem. Most of the time, I keep my glasses > on a > neck cord, focus with glasses on, then let the glasses dangle while I > frame. In a pinch, I can focus the camera reasonably well even > without > glasses (try that on an SLR without a diopter!). > > If I ever have to give up contacts entirely, I might get a .58 > body, or > a 35mm finder. The new torpedo-shaped V/C finder has just enough > "minification" to be right for a glasses wearer like me. > > As the old song goes: > > My eyes are dim, > I can not see, > I have (Hey!) not (Ho!) brought my specs with me. ;-) > > --Peter > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information