Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/02/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Not always. I only use high-speed to play with people and make them relax, but (especially at lectures and podium shots) I just about always shoot double-taps.... and just about invariably the second shot is the keeper of the pair. Most people relax slightly after they hear the click, and if the second shot is right there it catches that. Makes for a much better photograph with a natural expression, usually an unforced smile. There's also the insurance aspect... if the keeper goes corrupt the also-ran is usually good enough. Did it with film, too. Hell, I learned it on a 4x5... shoot one side, then change the exposure half a stop and shoot the other side. In a good case you'll have a decent backup; worst case you've probably got something you can use. Except the time I forgot to tell the lab tech to run the two boxes on separate runs... and he ran all 16 fujichromes through the same C41 process. Lost that gig. Life goes on. R. Clayton McKee PhotoJournalist from somewhere just south of somewhere else... --- On Sun, 2/20/11, Tina Manley <images at comporium.net> wrote: > That's the monkey/typewriter > approach.? Take enough photos and one of them > is bound to be good!