Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/08/04

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Staying w/ film for a while - handled a D100 (and a 10D, and...)
From: Afterswift@aol.com
Date: Mon, 4 Aug 2003 17:02:01 EDT

In a message dated 8/4/03 1:50:40 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
bdcolen@earthlink.net writes:

> But the question is why you put half the thought into your digital
>  shots. My point is that comes from your view of digital as not being
>  "real." Turn off autoeverything and shoot your digital camera the way
>  you'd shoot an M.
- -----------------------------------------
I'm now doing just what you suggest. I've set my 5050 at 1/250 for field work 
and I'm trying to work with it as I do with my M3. The nature of the Olympus 
5050 is such that it resembles a view camera in some ways and a PS in others. 
Since the 5050 has a zoom lens and my M3 uses separate lenses, part of the 
extra time involves switching between lenses -- and deciding to do that. I made 
sure that the 5050 would have an optical finder, closely related to the finder 
in the M and CL. I'm still in the learning process. But certain differences in 
approach between film and digital are becoming obvious. The M is much faster 
and responsive in actually making the exposure. Leica lenses are needle sharp. 
Shooting B&W with a Leica is the real thing. In a digital you're still 
playing with color inside the circuitry. And a digital is 100% dependent on battery 
power. Now and forever. 

Best,
br  
- --
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Replies: Reply from Henning Wulff <henningw@archiphoto.com> (Re: [Leica] Staying w/ film for a while - handled a D100 (and a 10D, and...))