Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I am reading a fat book about the industrial and technological history of the watch and that is fascinating stuff. The mechanical watch is a fine mixture of craftmanship, art and science and while outdated and made obsolete by the digital watch, it still sells well. The drive of the master craftsmen to design and produce a collection of extremely accurate machined parts to indicate time with an accuracy of a fraction of a second per day (or week) is paralled by the leica designers in their field. In a sense it is a bit strange that so much effort is put in a device that is used as a rough time indicator. it is enough for most people to be on time within a minute or so. Still when we look at a watch of which we know that is accurate beyond belief, we look at Time Measurement itself. The joy of using leica cameras and lenses is partly based on the same irrationality. When taking pictures, we use mostly a small fraction of the precision and recording capabilities of the instrument. And as the recent exchange of opinions about the limits of digital printing has shown, many persons are satisfied when they see an image that seems as detailed as the eye can percieve. Still there is more than meets the eye. As with the watch, the hidden precision and accuracy of reproduction, shines through and adds a new dimension. The Cosina Nokton 1.5/50 may superficially deliver as good a picture as the Summilux. Still I know that my Nokton has decentred elements and my Summilux has not. And that fact diminishes the joy of using the Nokton. At least it does for me. If I take a picture of a car with small reflections in the headlamp, I know there are details within the reflections, that good silver images can extract (and digital prints cannot). While I am unable to see these tiny details, I sense they are here and they will add to the hidden dimension of picture quality, where sensing is more important than seeing. As with a painting where you sense the artist and his brushes, without really seeing. I have no idea how to check the accuracy of a high precision mechanical watch and I know that a humble digital watch from Malaisia will rival the accuracy of the Swiss product. But the Swiss watch is durable and will record time for centuries, while the digital one lasts a year at most. And the swiss watch is being assembled with great care, parts are selected and machined to the highest industrial standards. The use of Leica cameras is for most of us a leisure activity, with passion, but still an act that should be pleasurable in itself. What pleasure to derive from it is an individual preference. I like to try to find the limits of recording capacity of the machine and I like to use an instrument that I know is build with an engineering quality that can support my queeste. The proverbial response that it is better to use a medium format camera than a 35mm camera when you are looking for high quality images, is missing the point. As is the remark that a simple digital watch is as good as a 10.000 dollar mechanical watch for its purpose of time indication. But the purpose of the swiss watch is not the mere indication of time, it is the embodiment of a century long drive to measure time to the smallest fraction. And the Leica camera is also the result of a century long drive to mechanically capture a slice of reality with high accuracy. The value of the camera is not measured in its ability to take good pictures. This list is full of messages that many cameras are very capable to do just that. We do the engineers of Canon etc no justice when we assume that they do not know how to build great cameras and lenses. They do! The value of the Leica camera is that is can take good pictures and that it is at the same time a piece of engineering that reflects tradition, craft and science. You sense ingenuity and elegance when holding the camera. The lenses are a good example. No one will see or can even detect the small tolerances that are used when machining the parts or fitting the parts. To adjust a lens element in such a way that the object point can be recorded at a micron level, is irrelevant for many a user. But the drive to do it and the craft to be able to adjust the lens in such a way, is build into the result. And we may or may not feel inclined to use the instrument in the same way as it is build and designed. The small negative-big print rule was the driving force of Barnack. To maximise the information on a negative is still the rule at Solms. And it is nice to know that the optical quality is still a challenge to wrestle with. As with an asymptote, you may never be able to find the target, but it is a pleasure to try. Erwin