Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/08/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I'm with you on that. If the most important facet is high resolution, Panatomic x might still be on the shelves. And Holga would be a very bad idea that never materialized. Jeffery On Aug 26, 2010, at 8:54 AM, Lawrence Zeitlin wrote: > Mark scribbles: > > 1x crop is what Barnack would be shooting if he was cruising the streets of > > Wetzlar and Cologne (K?ln) right now. > > > If you guys were shooting film would you be out with a stupid Minox?!?!?! > > - - - - - > > Give it up Mark. The differences in format sizes that you are obsessing > about are almost irrelevant. Next you will be arguing about how many angels > can dance on the point of a pin. But don't worry, Mark. Your position as > the > LUGs "stone in the shoe" is secure. > > > There is no particular photographic or aesthetic merit in the standard 35 > mm > frame size even though some of us fetishise it. Remember that Oskar Barnack > settled on the 24x36 mm frame size simply so he could use leftover lengths > of 35 mm movie film in a camera small enough for an asthmatic engineer to > carry on hikes. He considered the ur-Leica to be a personal camera small > enough to be carried in a coat pocket. In much the same way Walter Zapp > designed the Minox as a personal aide memoire camera small enough to be > carried in a watch pocket. Neither intended their cameras to be a great > pictorial instruments. > > > Extraordinary means have to be used with Leica sized film images to get > better than just adequate photographs. I'm impressed by most Leica > pictures > posted in the LUG Gallery but Lug members tend to be much better than > average photographers and are dedicated to achieving the best possible > technical results. When the present supply of Leica lenses has crumbled > into > dust, photo historians will treat the 35 mm frame size as just one step in > the reduction of image sensing formats from full plate to the future > equivalent of miniature size. > > > No REAL photographer still using film would shoot important commercial work > or landscapes with anything smaller than medium or large format. Every type > of camera has it's nitch. Exceptional photographs have been taken with > cameras of all sizes, even Minoxes. If you don't believe that, check out > the > results of a photo contest just posted on today's Submini-L group at > YahooGroups.com. > > > http://godfreydigiorgi.posterous.com > > > But cameras of whatever size are just tools, photographic enablers which > realize images already in the mind of the photographer. Just as you > wouldn't > use a sledge hammer to drive a tack, you wouldn't use a tack hammer to > drive > a railroad spike. > > > If you don't believe the vitriol aimed at the 35 mm format, just read the > Medium Format and Large Format web sites. They read exactly like your > comments about the toy like 4/3 format. Even for digital, if the 24x36 > format was big enough, why would Leica have developed the S2? > > > I'm sure that by now I have irritated most members of the LUG. It helps to > remember that the Leica is just a camera, not a religious icon. > > > Larry Z > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information