Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/06/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I cannot disagree more with Fred Ward's negative comments about amateurs who buy fast, and to his mind *professional* lenses. He said this in the context of the recent discussions of the relative merits of the two versions of the Summilux-M 35 1.4 that use aspheric glass. I am an amateur photographer. I would have liked to become a professional but here (the UK) there are very few professional photographers who earn really good money. Instead, I enjoy using good photography in my own profession, first as a magazine editor and more recently as an editorial consultant, and also like to take photographs in my own time - especially while travelling. Since all my photography is voluntary I would say that I enjoy it at least as much as some of the pros I know, some of whom are bored or photography per se, and others of whom would be in a different branch of photography were it not for the need to pay the mortgage etc. My goal is to photograph what I see, as close as possible to the way I see it. This is why I use a Leica M6, and a 35mm lens. I want the fastest lens possible so I can operate unobtrusively, handheld, but I do not want to sacrifice quality because this degrades the detail and purity of what I've seen. Hence I own the f/1.4 Aspheric. Mr Ward is right that a *high proportion* of my photographs would be *almost* as good if taken with a 35mm f/2 Summicron. But I have taken the decision to spend a little extra money to buy that extra percentile of quality and flexibility. This I would feel guilty about in a high-tech Japanese camera with designed-in obsolescence, but in a Leica outfit which I intend to keep for a decade or more, the difference in cost is a very modest investment indeed, especially since it should be possible to get back a good percentage of the purchase price of the rarer lens when (if) I ever get rid of it. Also, I do believe that psychology plays a part. If I buy what I consider to be *the best* equipment for the job, and I turn out bad photographs, I have only myself to blame. In the past (when I followed the fashion for autofocus, multi- program, evaluative-metered polycarbonate SLRs with slower, more bulky zoom lenses) I am convinced there were times when I would have taken a better photograph, had my equipment been up to scratch. These are only my reasons for buying fast 'pro' lenses for amateur use; other LUG subscribers' may be quite different.