Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/10/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A wonderful summation of the rangefinder/Leica experience, Richard. Shooting with a rangefinder really IS a different experience from shooting with an SLR. I use both, and I prefer the RF because it makes me so much more aware of the frame, and the importance of framing. Having that picture window with the lines on it makes me far more aware of graphic possibilities than does looking down a tunnel at the subject. But a word of warning - try to avoid the selling/buying trap so many of us fall into. Find what works for you and stick with it through hell or depression. Because every time you see you'll lose money. And you will invariably, at some point, buy the same damn focal length lens, or the same body again, but will, in effect, pay more for it. If I had all the money I've lost on selling and rebuying I'd have my kids' college tuition covered. :-) B. D. -----Original Message----- From: lug-bounces+bdcolen=earthlink.net@leica-users.org [mailto:lug-bounces+bdcolen=earthlink.net@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of Richard F. Man Sent: Monday, October 04, 2004 6:11 AM To: lug@leica-users.org Subject: [Leica] In praise of the RF cameras and Leica in particular I suspect a good number of you started out with RF or have made similar discovery long time ago, so this is boring old news to you - but the RF system and the Leica in particular is a fantastic photographic tool. Not that I am that good a photographer, but I am trying and learning. My wife pushed me to get the M7 as part of my 40th birthday present. This is after 2 years of my renewed interests in photography and collecting OM lens right and left. However, one phrase spoken by a gentleman we met back in Nova Scotia in 1987 stuck in my mind, "someday everyone wants an M..." Then I read up on Leica sites and such. I don't quite get all these weird descriptions of different style of photography or looking at object. After all, a viewfinder is a viewfinder. Why should it be any difference whether it is a rangefinder or a mirrored SLR? But hey, it is my midlife crisis and there are worse ways to blow some money.... 250+ rolls of slides, plus down to 3 main lens 35/1.4ASPH, 50/2, 90/2AA later. I think I see it now. No, generally I do not prowl the streets, prefocus and shoot, I just shoot (boring) semi-formal portraits mostly. But what a glorious view. With the framelines in the middle of a greater view, I see more possibilities of moving (left and right AND front to back) to recompose for better lines and more interesting scenes. And what scenes it records. While I don't print chemically and instead of scan the slides and print on an inkjet, I am most impressed with what I see after printing out ~30 11x14 prints for my portfolio last week. What glorious colors and depth. They look good on 8x10, which is what I used to do, but they look awesome as 11x14. And the M7, primitive to the tee, has just the right amount of "things." Personally I would prefer full aperture and shutter speed display in both auto and manual modes, plus an easier to use exposure compensation dial/lever, but it is close to perfection. We have a Minotla A2, which takes darn good pictures, and a Sony T1 that is so small it is always in my pouch, but time and time again, when I want to take pictures, out comes the M7. It certainly has been a learning experience. I bought and sold an M6 (needed the money at the time :-( ). I bought a Noctilux and sold it a year later to get the Tri-Elmar. Now the Tri-Elmar sits. I will probably sell it to fund the R-D1 or something. The CV 21/4 just got sold. I am not built for that angle of view. I am keeping the CV 75/2.5 just because it is so small. The 3 remaining Leica lens never disappoint. If a picture does not work, it's my problems, not because the lens is inadequate or the camera is not good enough. // richard (This email is for mailing lists. To reach me directly, please use richard at imagecraft.com)