Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/05/13

[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]

Subject: Re: [Leica] Where a Leica will take you
From: Jim Brick <jim@brick.org>
Date: Wed, 13 May 1998 23:41:17 -0700

Thanks Harrison,

We needed this. And need more.

Jim


At 12:20 AM 5/14/98 -0500, you wrote:
>Just thought I would relate my day, esp this evening to the LUG.
>
>I am currently in Dyersburg, Tennessee working on one of the magazines we 
>do.  I have shot around 20 some odd rolls of film since yesterday at 2pm 
>and have photographed everthing from the head of a national building 
>company, who I took into the middle field of wheat to shoot with one of 
>their buildings in the background to going out into the flooded 
>Mississippii River with a copule of local High school youths.  I was 
>trying to get a shot of the I-155 river bridge with the sun setting 
>behind it for the cover of our magazine.  It would have been an easy 
>shot...except the river was way out of its banks and over the road I 
>needed to be on.  I was talking about my problem with a local police 
>officer while doing a photo shoot with him and he linked me up with his 
>brother who had the boat.
>
>We were out tooling around the backwaters of the Mississippii river in a 
>small 14 foot john boat with a 9 horse motor trying to line up a shot.  
>The fellows had to get out and pull the boat in some low spots (They were 
>wearing hip boots) and we all three got eaten up by misquotes, they were 
>so thick at some points the drone was surrealistic.  We did our best to 
>stay out of the current as the boat was not powerful enough to match the 
>strength of the mighty Mississippii.
>
>It did end up making a very nice photo with the sun setting as a big ball 
>of fire below the bridge with reflections on the water, and would have 
>looked even nicer had I been able to shoot from dry land where I could 
>have used a tripod and gotten the pretty magenta color on the water as 
>the sun dipped below the horizon, but the shot is good as is and looked 
>great throught the R8 and 90 summicron.
>
>Of course all my gear now smells like dead fish and my camera bag has mud 
>and river flood water all over it. 
>
>Sure beats the heck out of working for a living.
>
>
>
>Harrison McClary
>http://people.delphi.com/hmphoto
>