Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/07/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi, Peter - I missed your first post because we have been out working in the garden in the few hours it hasn't rained here lately! Yes, I would have made the photos in B&W even if I had color available. In fact, I always carried two cameras, one with color and one with B&W film. I used B&W normally for people and for when I needed high speed - most of the time inside dark adobe houses! I think I would still use B&W even with the high ISO digital available today. That's why I've got the MM camera now. I just love B&W for people. The Guatemalan people use color as part of their identity and it seems a shame to remove that so most of my Guatemalan people are in color. I do have some of the women working in their houses in B&W, though. Ted is right about clothes and souls! Tina On Tue, Jul 9, 2013 at 1:45 AM, Peter Klein <pklein at threshinc.com> wrote: > I'm reposting this in the new thread in the hopes that B.D. will see it > and comment. Or anybody else. I'm interested in the "why" of what we like. > Welcome back, B.D., hope you stick around! Tina, see my question for you > at the end of the post. > > (Earlier, I wrote): > > > To ask whether black and white or color is superior is like asking whether > a string quartet is "better" than a full orchestra. It's almost a > meaningless question. You can say what you prefer, you can say that this > one or that one works better in certain situations. > > I shoot both. Digital is great because I don't have to limit myself when > shooting. I let the picture tell me whether it wants to be in B&W. > > I generally do prefer B&W for people pictures. I think it helps remove > other distractions and focus attention on the people, as B.D. said. There > is also something beautiful and special about black and white (IMHO). > Perhaps that's because I spent many hours looking at old Life Magazines > and books of the great photojournalists when I was young. I've noticed > that many thirty- or fortysomething Americans prefer color, but my Russian > and Eastern European friends of the same age almost always prefer my B&W > shots. Maybe we just like the visual language we learned as kids, just as > most of us prefer the popular music from our childhood and teen years. > > > When you're in places like Tina's Central America or Jayanand's India, > color is such an overwhelming part of what you see, so it begs to be used. > > Still, I have to ask this: Tina, I'm thinking of your wonderful grainy > B&W Noctilux shots in Central American huts, often by firelight. They have > a specialness in part because they are B&W. Suppose you had an M(240) back > then, or something else that could take decent photos at ISO 3200 or 6400. > Would you have used color? > > --Peter > > ______________________________**_________________ > Leica Users Group. > See > http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for > more information > > -- Tina Manley http://tina-manley.artistwebsites.com