Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/07/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mitch Alland asked:: >>Lagavulin and focussing Noctilux and 75 Summilux in low light<<< > I posted about learning to drink Lagavulin and got 15-20 responses, and > I posted about the problems of focussing the Noctilux and 75 Summilux > in low light and got 1 response which was jocular not informative. I > suppose someone will say, "Yup this is the LUG." So here's the > Noctilux/Summilux focussing question again:<<< G'day Mitch, Sorry mate but it's just like you say..>> "Yup this is the LUG." <<< And you made a good choice to re-post. Cause a bunch of us don't wake up to the important things until the Lagavulin wears off. ;-) However, I thought I saw a couple of posts on moving your body and not the focus ring? Possibly you missed them? >>>> Last night I tried to take portraits of three young women using the > Noctilux and the 75 Summilux on my M6 in low light which, with 400 ISO > film, required exposures of 1/15 sec. at f1.4 and 1/30 sec at f1.0. <<< > Trying to focus on the eyes, I found it extremely difficult:<<<< When I'm using the Noctilux under the conditions you speak, I focus on the highlight in the eye of the subject. And I don't think about it 'cause that's what breaks your concentration on the tiny highlight and then you're cranking the ring back & forth trying to get something in focus and missing the highlight. Trying to focus on anything else flat surfaced with no highlight is going to screw-up most frames at f 1.0, there's probably as much luck as skill involved working at f1.0 at anytime. But other than you trying to learn something new for low light "portrait" pictures, why wouldn't you move to better lighting to create good highlights? Then the odds are in your favour for success. I see another member suggested "practice." There isn't any better advice you can receive. This isn't try once in awhile, this is worked on weekly during times you've got diddly to do other than honing your skills handling these lenses. It doesn't mean shooting hundreds of rolls of film, it means taking camera in hand and focus on anything in low light to develop the "handling" accurately when the time comes to...." making real exposures." I can assure you and I'm sure many other Noctilux users will say, "When shooting wide open f 1.0 you're going to blow lots of frames!" As it's not the most forgiving lens at f1.0 in the world. But when yer right on the mark.... "Bam in yer face great look pictures!":-) I don't think there's any magical secrets to it other than "using the lens" as often as you can in the manner you're having a problem, then you'll get over it and it'll be a piece of cake. ted Ted Grant Photography Limited www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html