Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/01/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search](I've trimmed liberally, not because there was fat, but because overquoting is a sin. I urge anyone who's just arriving at this thread now to go back and read Mr. Zeitlin's immediately-preceding post.) 2010-01-02-17:14:06 Lawrence Zeitlin: > Mark writes: > > "Things get wider and wider every year. > The whole mindset of the photographing world. > The Leica 18 is the new 21. > And you could be shooting with a 15 or a 12. And plenty do all the time. > Lots of them are the top people." > - - - - - > > Why are ultra wide angle lenses becoming so popular? > > In 1966, Edward Hall wrote, [...] [back to LZ's voice] > In photographic terms ultra wide angle lenses, especially in close ups, > create the same form of visual distortion as personal spacing at the > intimate distance. Pictures taken with these lenses have the same sort of > psychological relevance as sitting close to a stranger.They are attention > grabbing because of the pseudo intimacy. But ultimately these pictures are > disturbing because we realize that we are being fooled. Our attention has > been hijacked, not by the pictorial content, but by the illusion of > personal > relevance. As we become accustomed to the visual trickery the effect > lessens. That's why the TV commercials lost favor. > > > Ultra wide angle lenses depict a travesty of life. Ultimately we will all > return to sanity and use normal lenses. Even the top people. A thoughtful note, which I'm inclined to believe is particularly insightful at least partly because it happens to jibe well with my own aesthetic instincts. :-) On a 35mm-frame-sized camera, it often feels most natural to shoot strangers with about a 50mm, and people to whom I've been properly introduced with a 35 or 28. Longer or wider glass is often indicated more for reasons of geometry (that thing is too small and far away, or that thing is too big and wide and I can't get far enough away). Getting right up someone's nostrils with a 12mm lens can be fun and dramatic from time to time, but is probably ultimately a gimmick. -Jeff