Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/03/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I am going to channel Tina and say The Leica M9 :-) I know that the California high altitude Sun makes the sky really blue, so I presume same in Peru (same Sun after all). There is some rumor about the XPan metering being overexposed at high altitude but I haven't been able to confirm that so that may or may not affect your Fujis. If it is me, I would go for a lightweight great everything camera, e.g. may be the M8 with a couple lens (e.g. 21 and a 50?), and then one camera and one lens that you know will give you the highest quality image possible, even if that weighs a bit more. On Fri, Mar 23, 2012 at 7:43 PM, Dante Stella <dstella1 at ameritech.net>wrote: > > Since this is sometimes a place for abstraction, I'll pose a hypothetical. > > Assume that you are a male in good physical conditioning. If you are > going traipsing around in the mountains and among ruins in Peru, what would > you take? I'm headed out next week. Usually, no matter where I go, I take > a Fuji GA645, 20 rolls of 120 film (for b/w), and some small camera for > color. Sometimes a 6x9 Fuji instead of the "little" Fuji. I've been > pretty good at making it work, as Tim Gunn would say. > > Aside from Macchu Picchu, I think I can improvise with about anything. > But up on the mountain (a place where I probably will never return), what > are the conditions like? Any weird-color light that screws with exposure > meters (like in the desert)? Any particular filtration? Were I to deviate > from my normal packing, there would be a lot of choices (these are the > *realistic* ones...) > > Fuji GA645 (=35mm) > - small, light, flawless > > Fuji GL690 (with 50, 100 and/or 180mm lenses) > - heavy as hell, but the 50mm has eye-burning resolution > - wants a separate meter > - would require 40 rolls of film > > X100 (=35mm) > - very lightweight, some ability to use grad NDs > > D700 (I can cover anything from 17 to 300mm) > - heavy, fast, able to shoot in any light. Great for ND grads > > Leica M8 (21 to 90mm) > - Not bad for all purposes, but a little heavy > > Nex-5 (16mm or 18-55 lenses). > - kills the X100 in shooting speed. Not bad at taking pictures, either. > Excels at HD video. > - somewhere, in a drawer, I have the superwide lens adapter > > Neither film nor batteries nor supplies are really an issue. If I took a > GL690, I would grab a cheaper 50mm (=21mm) finder than my Universal > Wideangle Finder M, but other than that, this will be off the shelf. I > would not take two heavy cameras, but aside from that, the sky is the > limit. As I would imagine at 10,000 feet. > > Ideas? I usually go on gut instinct the day before, but I do like to hear > different perspectives. > > Thanks > Dante > > ____________ > Dante Stella > http://www.dantestella.com > > NO ARCHIVE > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > -- // richard <http://www.richardmanphoto.com>