Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/02/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My experience exactly. The automated tools help you produce the goods quickly and easily but the really special pictures come from doing it manually, requiring a tool optimized for manual use. Have you posted these pictures yet? Doug Herr Birdman of Sacramento http://www.wildlightphoto.com on 2/28/05 2:48 AM, Rick Dykstra at rdcb37@dodo.com.au wrote: > Having discovered this magical puddle on the boulder out in the forest, > and the incredible variety of birds that are attracted to it if I top > it up with water, I spent the weekend standing on a stool behind Leica > and Nikon lenses. On the Saturday I was in an Ameristep Outhouse blind > with my head jammed up in the attic - bit hot it got, when it was > sunny. So on Sunday I tried without the blind - and most of the birds > were happy to play regardless - at a distance of only 2.5 to 3 meters. > > I started with the apo telyt 560/5.6 and R8 and found trying to focus > on birds doing spins in the puddle nearly enough to give me a cerebral > hemorrhage. I didn't feel like I was getting many keepers so on Sunday > I dragged out a F5 and 300 AFS, hardly used since my soccer photography > days. It was very good for that so maybe I should give it a go with > 'da boyds'. > > That Nikon made me feel like the God of Photography, on steroids. Damn > this is easy. The 300 plus a 1.4 converter - faster than my 560 so > more wriggle room in the changeable light. I machine gunned a pair of > little thornbills as they splashed water over each other. Great fun. > > So I got four rolls processed today, two from the Leica gear and two > from the Nikon. With the Leica I got about 5 keepers from each roll, > vs about 8 with the Nikon, which had felt better than that. I'd been > using the F5 on focus priority mode and so it only fired when it was > happy, as I was with each shot. And it did achieve focus with each > shot, but not necessarily on what I would have liked - the bird's eye. > When it missed, it didn't miss by much, usually picking up the feathers > just in front of the eye. Whereas my misses with the Leica gear were > usually by more. But a miss is a miss is a miss. > > Two shots stood out head and shoulders above the rest, of a White Eared > Honeyeater and a Scarlet Robin (boy did I get a surprise when when that > guy jumped into the viewfinder!). And, both were taken with the Leica. > It was the ease of focussing anywhere on the screen that made the > difference. No dicking around trying to get the sensor in the right > place. Complete freedom with composition. Neither shot would have > worked with the Nikon as the sensors were not where I needed them. > > So, I have a good number of very engaging and useable photos from the > Nikon, and a couple of absolute crackers from the Leica. Those two > shots did feel good as I took them - I remember saying 'Yes!' under my > breath. > > The moral? Autofocus maketh one a God - not! :-) > > Rick. > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information