Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Glen M. Robinson wrote: > I am terribly humbled by these antique pictures; I cannot produce this type > quality with my high tech gear. The sharpness, gradation, and other visual > characteristics of these prints are breathtaking. Perhaps the development techniques of the time were partly responsible. Some 35 years ago, a friend at work told me he wanted to try mixing his own developer from the raw chemicals. In some Ancient Dusty Volume of Photographic Lore which I'd lent him he found a recipe for "Leitz two-bath developer" and decided to give this a try - I think the idea of having a developer which had to be used in two stages amused him. Anyway, this guy's favourite subject was the female nude, so he tried his newly-brewed developer after his next photo shoot, and was amazed by the results - far better graduation than he could obtain with conventional developers, he claimed. He swore that from then on he'd use this developer. He moved to another job soon afterwards, so I never learned if he carried on using it. (Looking through my photo books today, I can't find this mysterious developer - I can only assume that I've lost the book, or maybe it was an old book on loan from the public library. The idea of a "Leitz" developer seems strange - I can't imagine the mavens of Wetzlar deciding to invent a developer.) "A.H.SCHMIDT" <horst.schmidt@actek.com.au> wrote: >I firmly believe, the era of the warmer, and softer images stopped , when Leitz sold the last Summar lens. The Summitar after, was a fabulous lens, followed by the Summicron, which was the just about as perfect as was possible. But something had changed, the emphasis was more on the reproductive accuracy and some of the aura was lost. I still have a very clean Summar (coated post-war) and tried it on my M2 last year. I was very pleased by the results, (probably because the aberrations of this elderly lens degraded the image to match the world as seen via my poor eyesight!) I've since found a Leitz hood for it, so this lens is now going to be dragged out of its 40 year long retirement and put back into use. Regards, Doug Richardson