Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/07/31
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Sat, 31 Jul 1999 10:51:54 -0400, Paul Schiemer <schiemer@magicnet.net> wrote: >A 645 neg is three times+ the real estate of a 35mm neg. >That alone is worth the price of admission- if your goal is to produce >quality prints at size. This idea (judgement, objection aspersion, etc.) comes up regularly on the rec.photo ng's. I have always violently objected to it for one reason, and that reason is the chauvinistic assumption that photographic "quality" is to be judged solely on the basis of resolution, tonality and grain. The quality of a photograph in the eye of the beholder has to do with how well the image communicates the intentions of the photographer. While this communication may in some cases be enhanced by technical excellence, it can never ever be created solely by technical excellence. As an example of how communication is not hindered by technical imperfections, consider Capa's shot of the dying Republican soldier. 'Nuff said. The issue of 35 vs MF is not primarily one of negative size; it's about the type of photography each format best enables. If your objective is wall-sized landscapes, then MF is obviously the better choice. If you want to document the lives of the homeless after dark, I'd suggest that an M with a Noctilux might be the better tool, and grain size be damned. Now obviously this isn't meant to suggest that 35mm photographers don't value technical excellence - if this were so, we wouldn't be investing such relatively extravagant sums in Leica equipment. In my case the goal of this investment is simply to maximize my ability to do the things that 35 (especially Leica's version of it) does best. There is a great overlap in the types of photography that cameras of different formats can do. A Pen F can take the same landscape picture as a 4x5 for instance, and if the enlargement factor is very low :-) the results may be indistinguishable. What sets the formats apart is the things they do well that the other format does not at all. For landscapes, for architecture, for some general-purpose photography, the Fuji folder may indeed do as well as or better than the Leica. But as soon as the light levels drop and you need to carry a few pieces of high-speed glass to get the job done - the Fuji is out of its depth. Ask Ted Grant if he could have shot "This is Our Work" with a 6x7 folder... The question is not simply whether your goal is to produce quality prints at size, but also what the content of that image is to be. Paul Chefurka