Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> > Date: Sat, 11 Sep 1999 09:42:00 -0400 > From: kabob@tiac.net (Bob Keene/Karen Shehade) > Subject: Re: [Leica] Introducing Johnny Deadman/and stuff.... > > I'd love to hear about a 'transatlantic maple syrup explosion'! The Canon 7 + 28/2.8 was in the overhead locker in a carry-on bag with a bottle of prime Candian maple syrup I was smuggling back into the UK. It was as I was exiting into Heathrow that I noticed maple syrup dripping out of the bag. I guess the pressure drop cracked the bottle. Anyhow, the 7 was totally covered. I cleaned off the lens, but the body (which was pretty ugly, a hotshoe epoxied on for the 28 finder etc) had been penetrated. In the end I got all the maple syrup out of it... except on the film counter, which is now permanently stuck at 40. The finder was screwed, too. > > As for edge-to-edge sharpness being over rated: I have a 35 Summilux > (non-ASPH) and a 20 5.6 Russar for my M6 (the Russar won't screw into the > Canon 7 because of the size of the rear elemant) and these lenses are > TESTIMONIALS to the 'beauty' of 'blur'!!! Never mind the Canon 50 f1.4 I > shoot wide open ..... Yeah, fat wides, all the way open. What a great look, especially backlit. Screw bokeh! It's coma, man. Coma and spherical aberration. Your best friends. My Canon 24/2.8 FD does the same thing. Just great. If you want to go crazy, even overexpose a litte. Check out some of Robert Frank's pictures in THE AMERICANS... exactly this effect. Very romantic, in a gritty kind of way. Gentle and tough. Woo! You see the same thing in reverse in Bill Klein's 50s NYC pictures... a REALLY fuzzy enlarging lens, blacks bleeding everywhere. Kind of mannered, like so much of Klein's stuff, but also cool. Anyone here recommend a lens for this effect (I do it now with the ground glass out the back of a 6x6 slide)? > > Mainly an XP-2 shooter, but if time allows will delve into the Ilford Delta > 3200 for that 'fun stuff'; would love to experiment with some infrared, but > sigh.... those wedding albums won't put themselves together! I shot XP-1 a long while, especially for flash, but the C-41 processors scratch film too often, and the split D-76 or D-73 process is foolproof and yet flexible -- amazingly fine grain, too. I also found XP-1 a little *too* fine grained...or at least, not quite sharp to my eyes. One of the corollaries of shooting soft with lenses wide open is that you need *some* grain as texture in those fuzzy zone 5 and 4 areas... or it just looks blurry. The eye needs velcro (TM). > > Having too much fun with the Leitz 'R' lenses on my Canon EOS A2; so my M6 > has been sadly neglected the last couple of weeks!! > > Hope you score the M4P! I loved mine- wish I hadn't parted with it- see if > you can get an MR-4 meter for it- they work great! The auction ends tonite. I checked out a knackered M2 in central London today for the same price... no comparison really. The M4-P seems to have been drastically under-rated... those rumours about build quality, which seem to have been off mark. Certainly an exc+ M4-P has got to be a better buy as a user than that trashed M2, which looked like it had been dropped out of a helicopter, and needs a finder for the 28. The T-90...one of those cameras that begs to be picked up and USED (like I did mine, today). Not exactly inconspicuous, but great karma. It's my point-and-shoot. Chakka chakka chakka! The dog loves it. - -- Johnny Deadman "The writer who writes a good book while sitting in torn breeches should first mend his breeches" - Montaigne