Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/06/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A couple of weeks ago I was on an Asian business trip, and I spent a few days in Hong Kong. My hotel room was on the 30th floor of the Grand Hyatt, with a magnificent view of Hong Kong harbour, facing west. Due to jet lag, I woke up very early in the morning and threw open the curtains. A gray overcast early dawn with intermittent heavy rain showers. No big deal, I would be in meetings all day. But, as I sat sipping my coffee, watching the boats in the harbour and the day brighten, the clouds started to lift and within the space of minutes a most magnificent rainbow appeared, arching over Central, part of the city, and the harbour. I quickly grabbed my Leica M6 and put on the 35mm Summilux. Oh Oh! The windows were sealed. No way to avoid shooting through the glass. A small section of lower window wasn't streaked with rain, but it was fairly dirty. No choice, I lay on the floor, using my elbows as a brace and took several shots. That evening, back in the room, the sunset tuned out to be very dramatic and I shot about a half roll of the setting sun, using my 90mm Elmarit, with the lights coming on in the hundreds of ships in the harbour. I remember thinking that while I probably had some interesting images, the fact that I had to shoot both scenes though a dirty window would make the whole thing academic. A few days ago I was sorting the slides shot on the trip and saw the rainbow and sunset roll. Fantastic pictures. One or two of each scene really were great. I made a couple of 8X10 Ciba prints and pinned them to the display board that I use when consider whether an image is worth working on further. The images were incredably sharp, with great clarity-- just what I expect from Leica lenses. I sat there feeling pleased until it hit me -- all of these shots had been through a dirty window pane! I had forgotten this when looking at the slides with a loup and subsequently printing them. Now my question is -- was the window glass single or multi-coated? Was it perchance made by Hoya or even B+W? Maybe I'll carry around a pane of dirty window glass from now on. :-) Michael