Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/04/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This is from Not-George, but I've done this kind of stuff at various times. One possible solution at this time is to use a scanning back such as one of the Betterlight's. You have motion problems, and they have bulk/cord issues, but stitching is avoided and you get exceptional detail (and huge files). Otherwise, yes, film is still a good solution. A problem with tilting, shifting and then stitching the result is that the image size of the parts that you want to merge in the shift is then usually at different magnifications. At present the Canon with TSE lenses makes it easy. But it's no 8x10. The best one shot digital solution right now is a technical camera and a high-res MF back, but that is also the priciest. As far as carrying things at altitude: When we went to the Himalayas, I carried a Mamiya 6 with 3 lenses, a Horizon 150 (MF) and a couple of Leicas with 5 lenses plus tripod etc and a ton of film. We hiked up to 14750ft (4500m). The first day or two were tough, but then things smoothed out and we went, as our guide used to say "a little bit up, a little bit down". That meant down 1500-2000m into the valley and then the same distance up again, over and over. The sherpas carried the food and tents and stuff, but we carried all the camera stuff myself plus some clothing. We were advised to practice by finding a 20-30 storey building at home and practicing an hour or two each day going up and down the stairs with a load. It still doesn't really prepare you for altitude, though. The main thing for the altitude preparation was to clim high during the day and go down 500m or so to sleep each evening. No one in our group got altitude sickness. A couple of years later, in the Andes at comparable altitudes I got altitude sickness and suffered a couple of days. At 10:34 AM -0700 4/12/11, Richard Man wrote: >So George, educate me a bit here please as I don't know the world of >tilt-shift much except "in theory." > >So are you saying that the ideal solution, barring that it's not digital, is >a large format camera shooting on film, with a wide angle lens? > >-- >// richard <http://www.imagecraft.com/> -- Henning J. Wulff Wulff Photography & Design mailto:henningw at archiphoto.com http://www.archiphoto.com