Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mike J noted that it does not make sense to try to got to the limits of what might be the optimum/maximum image quality of a 35mm negative as this elusive realm will not be observable by mere mortals, that is normal photographers in average working and viewing conditions. Now this is quite a weak argument: first of all: without challenging the limit you never know how to progress and how to evaluate where you stand. Imagine that a Zen master would say to his pupils: forget about striving for your inner self. Nobody will be able to see when you have reached this state. If leica designers would have followed the dictum that you can stop when it is good enough we would never have seen the current much improved optical systems. Second: it is a consistent line in Mike's prescriptions that Leica lenses are overhyped (my interpretation!) and that most users will not see any significant or important difference in image quality when Leica lenses are used in situations they are designed for: hand held 35mm shooting of dynamic objects. In these conditions any Pentax lens presumably would deliver equally well. Now I would like to challenge these assumptions. Leica lenses are designed to deliver the best optical quality that any computer can calculate and a highly trained craftsman can assemble and adjust. This will give you potential imagery to medium format levels. To exploit this quality is not a matter of not being able to see it, but of willing to see it and having the expertise to extract the quality. Again imagine the average cardriver, put him in a racing car: let him drive around the block and ask him if he now has experienced the best of modern automotive engineering. So let a Leica user shoot a roll of film in his backyard and ask him if he now sees Leica imagery. When competently deployed Leica lenses do deliver above all others and and no no a tripod is not a sine qua non. Many of my images (whatever the content) are handheld shots on 100ISO film even in twilight hours and they do give that unique quality that Leica lenses give their outstanding fingerprint. Anyone can see it. It is easy to deny it: that clever Englishman said it hundreds of years ago: beauty is in the eye of the beholder. If we wish to settle for average quality in average conditions, the quality difference might diminish. But would we really like to buy expensive equipment and than aim for a quality level far below the possible. I really wonder why this attitude is as persistent as it is wrong: the intriguing and challenging and gratifying possiblity of Leica lenses/bodies to produce medium format like imagery in all sorts of shooting environments (from studio to hospital theatres) and add that specific Leica flavor to your imagery, is what we want to accomplish. Of course we may miss quite often, but without aiming we will never hit the target. To get to this standard of quality we are entitled to use every possible trick of the trade: tripods, low speed film, train for a steady hand, use a tree and shoot at an EI of 32000. This is a Leica list is it not? So let us get and strive for Leica images. I will reflect on any suggestion and advice, unless I am ordered to forget my tripod, that I must shoot handheld, that I may only use a Leica lens at full aperture, that I may not enter a studio with my Leica, and that I should settle for a quality level of (generically speaking) the Pentax type and that going any further is an illusion and only acceptable as an excuse for spending too much money on equipment that is as anachronistic as it is expensive. Erwin