Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/09/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The original title I wouldn't be able to translate into English - A la Sauvette is a sort of "hit and run", illegally, and unnoticed or stealthily, which shows in the footages. It may only make sense to French speaking people, that is very few of us these days ;-) Matches the character he embodied of the dilletante gentleman photographer playing with the limits. Hope this helps. Amities Philippe Le 18 sept. 14 ? 23:21, Mark Rabiner a ?crit : > "Dandy" though is also not much of a compliment to foist upon ones > self. > But a hop, skip and jump from Dandy is the whole idea of "Gentleman > photographer" (or lady equivalent). And that kind of thing is > certainly part > of Leica "Culture". Leica lifestyle. > > Righty now I am reading a small book I've had for a few years its > small and > hard cover and fits in my side bag with my camera. Its called: > The Mind's Eye > Writings on Photography and Photographers > Photographs and essays by Henri Cartier-Bresson > http://aperture.org/shop/books/henri-cartier-bresson-the-minds-eye-book#sth > ash.Y6T40aFy.dpuf > http://tinyurl.com/kqku57e > > Going to finally find out what this guy thinks. YouTube ing him is > frustrating for a guy who does not speak French all that well. English > either! > > He actually in the capture I'm on now actually used the term "Decisive > moment" to describe what you'd want when doing a portrait. > Previously in the many chapters before he never once used the term. > And this > didn't surprise me. The fact that he just now as I'm reading did use > the > term did surprise me. I almost think its in deferent to his > publisher who > came up with the term to title the English Language version of his > book and > the fact that he is so closely associated with the term. >