Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/10/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]From: A.H.SCHMIDT <horsts@primus.com.au> Sent: Thursday, October 07, 1999 07:30 Subject: Re: [Leica] leica, don't fail me now! -- oh dang! > Most shots showed very little camera shake. I then decided, > that Flash was not for me. I hate using flash. For one thing, it's too easy to mess up--you add lots of variables with flash, and getting a correct exposure is more problematic. However, the main reason why I can't stand flash is aesthetic. It just looks really bad (unless it is done very carefully, and set up in advance). In most situations, if you use flash at all, it's an on-camera flash. Your subject looks kind of washed out and brightly lit against a completely dark background. It has an artificial look to it (because it _is_ artificial) and it isolates the subject from the real world. You can get around this by moving the flash or using multiple flashes, but that isn't something you can do quickly and easily. Another problem with flash is that it isn't really that useful. If your subject is more than a very short distance away, or is not right in the center of the frame, a flash isn't going to help much. The only way I see to get realistic and attractive photos is to use available light. Even a handheld shot with a bit of camera movement in available light can still look a lot better than a shot on a tripod taken with a flash. At least it looks like it did in real life, instead of that deer-in-headlights look that flash usually produces. I have flash units for my Nikons, but they never get used. I don't have a flash for the Leica, and I don't foresee getting one. If I need to shoot in low light, it'll be fast film, maybe a Noctilux, and, if worse comes to worst, a tripod. But I hate flash. > Whenever I have to use flash, then for me, the quality does > not matter. The final prints are either for research purposes > or some shots about the extended family at a party where > everyone wants to be in the picture. Exactly. Flash is for documentation purposes. -- Anthony