Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/09/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]thanks Tom... have fun on the trip. Steve On Sep 23, 2006, at 11:00 PM, TTAbrahams@aol.com wrote: > > I was just packing up the M8 for transport back to Solms and this > started me > thinking about what I thought about it. It is very M-like in > operation, to > the point that the right thumb is forever flailing around for an > advance lever > and every time I opened the baseplate I stopped myself "did I > rewind the > film?" This particular M8 cycled through Vancouver and out-laying > areas for > about a month and the consensus seems to be "how soon can I get > one" or " how > can I raise the required $ 4800 for one". > In 2004 Epson lent me a RD-1 for an extended trial (3 months) and > this was > my first foray into the world of Pixels and JPEG/RAW. At the time > I thought > the experience was interesting, but not sufficiently so to buy the > camera. > Another two years have passed and even a confirmed Luddite like me > is getting > more interested. I do harbour a suspicion that Leica allotting one > of the M8 to > me for trying could be a way to establish a baseline "if Tom would > buy it we > have the design right". In my opinion they have succeeded - the > M8 does feel > like a true M. The controls are simple enough and reasonably well > laid out. > The old "standards" like viewfinder, frame-lines, body-shape is > close enough > to the regular M and the digital part is easy enough to figure out > even > without a manual. > The M8 came along when I went out, but never alone. There was > always a M2 as > a companion and I found that I shot as much with the film based > camera as > with the M8. This could change when I get my own M8, but I know > that I would > still use film primarily. There is process you go through when you > shoot film, > composition, exposure, processing and editing that I find changes > with the > digital. The instant "recall" leads to many "corrective" pictures. > "Hmm, if I > move over there, would it look different or improve?" With film you > have to > think more clearly and there is a "decisive moment" when to shoot. > With the M8 > there was many an indecisive moment instead! Part of this has to do > with my > inexperience of this particular medium but part of it is inherent > in the > process. You shoot and it is tempting to instantly look at the > image rather than > continue to look at the scene, it is easy to lose the "flow". > This afternoon I had coffee with my friend Chris, he borrowed the > M8 for 3 > days and brought some prints to show me. Extreme low light scenes > with 28/1,9 > and 35/1,2 lenses. The quality is amazing, it would be difficult > to duplicate > the shots with film and printing them would have been a nightmare. > The > prints had a smoothness to them that was disconcerting, at least > for someone used > to TRI-X. They were unmanipulated prints - straight from a card, no > photo-shop magic applied. They had the look of XP-2 or Tmax C-41 > prints, with that > long tonality and lack of grain. > I did add up what I shot over the time I had the M8; "keepers" > were about > 130 shots which were transferred to a CD and during the same time > I shot about > 55 rolls of film and looking at the negatives and marking the ones > that looks > interesting I ended up with about 150. About the same ratio and > yes, the CD > is more compact, but the film stuff can be filed away and I don?t > have to > worry about long term storage. > I am looking forward to "go digital", but there is no way I am > giving up on > film. At the moment there are more than 2 miles of film in the > freezer and > watching that print pop in the developer tray beats looking at a > computer > screen anytime. I can see the M8 shine in "Hail Mary" situations. > The dynamic > range in low light is nothing short of amazing, the ability to > "push" and > "pull" at the touch of a button is another bonus and the fact that > it can use > lenses that have established performance parameters already on our > "regular" > M-mount cameras. It is also a compact system, a M8/a M2 and the > 21/35/50 kit > that I use is smaller and faster than most of the DSLR's with their > HUGE zoom > lenses and camera bodies the size of SUV's. > The M8 is the first camera that got me interested in digital as a > picture > taking tool. With the RD-1 I never got the same feeling as with > the M8 - no > fault of the camera, just my perception at the time. Epson > deserves much credit > for it and it does have a film-advance lever and a rewind crank > (which is > more convenient to "chimp" with than the M8's buttons). Will the > M8 make me a > better photographer? Probably not, but as I mainly take pictures > for reasons > only known to me, it doesn't matter. Photography to me is a way of > enjoying > myself and the M camera's suits me for that. Hasselblad's, > Sinar's, Nikon's, > etc. were tools for working and I cant still loose that feeling > that there is > a client or even worse, an AD waiting to pounce upon my efforts. > With the M > it is for me, by me and if nobody but me ever see the results that > is fine > too. > Now it is off to that Pixel Party known as Photokina - somewhere > among the > halls there will some black/white silver halides hiding for me to > fondle. > Tri-X and a M2/MP and maybe extend the loan of the M8 another > couple of days for > that low light stuff! > Tom A > ------------------------- > Tom Abrahamsson > Vancouver, BC > Canada > (http://www.rapidwinder.com/) rapidwinder.com > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information