Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/11/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]jon.streeter OFFERED: Subject: Re: [Leica] Leica Monochrom in DC today NOT DC? > Fascinating observation about not thinking you were shooting in black and > white, just shooting.<<< Hi Jon, When I started playing in photography 1950, colour was an expense beyond my economic reach. So I never bothered with it. Besides I learned to soup B&W film and eventually got around to making my own B&W prints using my wife's "tin baking trays" :-( Which didn't make her a happy camper because the trays all went black.... nothing like Acetic acid and tin! I eventually had to buy her a new complete set of baking trays and a set of plastic photo trays so I may live another day! ;-) But right at the beginning the most important part of being a success ( whatever that was 63 years ago?) Was the content of a successful captured moment! No different than today! Be that stock cars crashing & flipping during a race. A major fire with engines and police and whatever was happening............ It was the content with B&W film! Yep all 36 frames! Roll after roll! By the hundreds! If we went on a little holiday and the weather, location was pretty? I might spring for a roll of Kodachrome? But never had a projector to show. :-( So that took care of shooting colour! :-) During my many years of shooting documentaries for the National Film Board of Canada it was 100% B&W regardless of subject. From under the earth mining, birthing, cattle ranchers to deep sea fishing vessels' off either coast of Canada. Or me to the North Pole. You name it and I've probably shot it in B&W. Most of the 100,000 collection images in The National Art Gallery of Canada in Ottawa are B&W. Every frame with nary a thought about colour. My personal National Archives of Canada collection of 280,000 images are a mixture of B&W, some colour shot for different clients. It's the largest photo collection by a single photographer in the History of Canada. Lot's of Happy Snapping to be sure! :-) Damn you just have to love it! :-) Like I've said for years! "Real Photographers Shoot B&W! Eat Sushi and Drink Single Malt Scotch!" :-) AND: "When you photograph People in Colour. You Photograph their Clothes. But when you photograph people in B&W . You Photograph their Souls!" Shooting books on the medical profession started in June 1980 in B&W. Then along came digital some years later and I started shooting digi without a thought about shooting in colour, then converting to B&W! The book "Women in Medicine . A Celebration of their Work." I shot and souped 500 rolls of Tri-X with not a thought of colour during the months of shooting in the USA and Canada. Producing one of my best ever books! And all shot with Leica cameras, M7's & R8's. Sandy Carter was my co-shooter on this book and you can't tell her photos from mine even when we were shooting in different hospitals and cities! You might be surprised to learn every frame of my 500 rolls were shot set on automatic "A". And not one frame lost to anything........ but ME shooting a bad angle or moment! :-( Exposures all perfect! Leica's can be absolutely amazing tools of the trade when one doesn't think techie stuff and just shoots magical moments of life! B&W or colour! cheers, Dr. ted