Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/01/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted, To me the benefits far outweigh the faults. But that's me. I've been shooting color and b&w without problems, unless I take a problem photo on purpose. I do not use the filters even though I keep them in my bag. I love the camera as do a few others here. And I'll keep shooting it. Len On Jan 29, 2007, at 6:42 PM, Ted Grant wrote: > Wade Heninger said & and showed: >>>> I've not looked at the color at all - probably won't - and as > soon as I can get a "always preview in B/W" option in Lightroom, I'll > probably never see it so the IR and WB issues just are not an issue > for me. > Here are a few pictures: > http://www.heninger.org/gallery/victoria/<<<< > > Hi Wade, > hey some nice photos including some of my garden bits and pieces! :-) > > To the crew regarding my garden . :-) > > Wade and I had a wonderful afternoon last Friday during his visit to > Victoria, had some lunch and a good old fashion photo gab session > about new > stuff and old ..... M8 etc. > > Wade you've posted an overall fine series of what an M camera can > do in the hands of talent! :-) > > As I watched you clicking away like a kid with a new toy (it is) > it was obvious how > well you handled the M8, it didn't matter film or digital, it was > an M > camera in hands and flying! :-) > > It's unfortunate there have been a number of problems with the M8 > shooting > colour. On the other hand I can honestly say in all the years I've > shot with > M cameras they were never used but a miniscule moment or two for > colour. > > I also realize many folks have but one camera for their shooting > whatever type of film. > > Mine were B&W cameras! When push came to shove in super bad light > situations it was an M, Noctilux and whatever the slide film of the > day was > at F1.0 and being there. > > When colour was required it was 99.999999999% Leica SLR's of some > model or > other. And I certainly appreciate the frustrations of M8 owners > over the > colour situation, however. > > In all honesty, I can't for the life of me understand why you don't > send > them back, get your money returned and get on with life. But oh > no, it's > day after day of e-mail tales of woe and whine about a faulty > machine that > requires "add on fixing!" > > Surely if you were to purchase any other appliance and were told, > "well it's > not quite right, but we're going to send you the parts for you to > "add on" > and that'll fix the problem." > > Wouldn't you scream bloody murder for a refund and return it? > > If nothing else, family members who've whined and kept their > machines have > an amazingly high degree of tolerance for faulty equipment. > > However, as noted by one member something like.. "I can't imagine > just letting it sit on the shelf gathering dust until the fix it > filters arrive. I'd be working it to death shooting B&W and > learning all the idiosyncrasies of the camera and it's inner > workings!" > > Despite what I said above about sending it back. > > That's an absolutely champion idea. And what I'd do before giving > into whining. I might have a word or two of bitching, but having > popped five grand I'd sure make that puppy work as hard as possible > until the fixing filter arrived. Then put it in the bag ....." just > in case some day I needed to shoot some M colour!" :-) > > And the camera would continue to be a B&W machine. ERGO: no colour > problems. And smiling all the way to the finished photograph. Sans > whine. ;-) > ted > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information