Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I was looking through a file of Leica stuff and ran into this "Letter to the Editor." I scanned it in and ran it through an OCR program so I wouldn't have to type it in. I thought it was interesting. Jim _______________________________________________________ Leica or Not Because your magazine is titled Photomethods, and no doubt is interested in such methods, I'm compelled to comment on the methods used by Bruce and Ken Zuckerman in photographig the Dead Sea Scrolls (August 1990). Their article suggests that they were successful in spite of variability in negative density, and the need to make a trial exposure with Polaroid film, and they talk about fine tuning, etc. I once had a similar problem as a research scientist, which had stumped the local photo lab, trying to retrieve information using view cameras and process lenses to no avail. They had to photograph a 40-inch-square computer-generated printout and reduce it to a one-inch-square image without resolution or contrast loss. They concluded that using the most expensive apochromatic lenses couldn't hack it, consequently nothing else could come even close. I learned of their plight and begged for a chance to fail. They sneered but obliged, and I gave them exactly what they wanted: a one-inch-square image on 35mm film. They were flabbergasted. Pedestrian photographers are sometimes more influenced by gadgetry than total system performance when considering a camera. They're usually oblivious of the significance of modulation transfer functions or the least circle of confusion of a given lens, but that's where the quality lies, and in the ability of the complete system to have the negative in the image plane, and the image sharply focused on the negative. The difference in 0.01 mm degrades the image. It's virtually impossible to mass-produce cameras to near zero tolerance that is the ideal, but economically disastrous situation. In 1924, a successful microscope manufacturing company ventured into the camera market. They knew people would pay a lot more money for a microscopic objective that produced a clearer image. In carrying this philosophy into photography, it was obvious that sharper lenses meant greater enlargeability. Therefore, a high-quality lens does not require a large format in order to produce large pictures. Consequently, the first question they asked was, "What is the information capacity of the negative material?" Having found this, they set forth to design lenses to utilize that capacity. Back in 1924, they were able to obtain as much information on a 35mm neg as one could expect to get on 6x9cm. Their quality has improved consistently over the years, producing optics that lead the field; because now there are hundreds of would-be imitators, any of their products will give you a "good" 3=BDx5 photo~ut only 20 will give you a good 5x7; 10 might give you a good 8xlO; five will give you a good 16x20; three will give you a good 20x30. But unless extraordinary quality control is in force, only one camera can consistently give you images that used to be seen in Kodak's Colorama in New York City's Grand Central Station, some 20x60 feet, from a 35mm negative, a Leica negative, that is. How much easier Bruce and Ken's job could have been if they had a Leica R6 and the lOOmm Apo Macro f/2.8. The savings in film and time could buy them one. Nothing can even come close to this combination. W.B. Greene Vero Beach FL