Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/09/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]So by that thought process none of your film cameras were any use for B&W? ;-) john ________________________________________ So now dumb-ass question? Do all these super hot shot new B&W LEICA'S do that for their multi thousands of dollars? Show you the world before you in B&W?? Or do they just show you nothing more than the same old crap.... "The world in colour...... but captures the image in B&W???????? BIG DEAL AND FOR HOW MANY THOUSANDS??????" Or through the view finder you view our natural colour world... but on the back screen you have a black & white image??????? If it doesn't let you see in B&W through the view finder? Heck why waste your money buying one of those when just a few hundred dollars you can have a magical machine that allows you to see your photo as a pure B&W............. BEFORE YOU GO CLICK! SO BIG DEAL ON ANY MONO LEICA! Heck it doesn't allow you to see how your potentially beautiful B&W shot looks before you go CLICK!! I think there might be a few interesting responses on this??????? cheers, Dr. ted :-) :-) -----Original Message----- From: LUG [mailto:lug-bounces+tedgrant=shaw.ca at leica-users.org] On Behalf Of Mark Rabiner Sent: September-19-14 6:31 PM To: Leica Users Group Subject: Re: [Leica] Alternative to the Monochrom It just doest come any dumber than this. I think the purpose of the article is not to make an intelligent point but simply to drum up some attention We need to get smarter and ignore such stuff. But here I am typing away! The idea is that because you can shoot black and white jpegs with consumer quality cropped color fuji camera which can be in black and white mode and since the fuji camera has a rangefinder in it than it is a replacement or alternative for a Leica Monochrome. A camera which makes monochrome raw files from a monochrome sensor. In other words a consumer grade cropped color sensor replaces a full frame Monochrom sensor professional grade sensor. One could say that nothing makes any difference no matter what you do. Its all a big giggle. I see the title of the article is " The Fuji Monochrom" The problem being that its a color camera. One can always sell ones Leica M for a very nice Pentax Spotmatic and use the extra many to take a short vacation but have we "replaced" our M? It implication is that we are using the word to say the cameras are mainly interchangeable. Whatever a Leica M can so so could a Spotmatic pretty much just as well. And I think Leica users and most of the rest of the world knows that that's not likely the case. Its like how the word "backup" gets used. . On 9/19/14 10:30 AM, "Tina Manley" <tmanley at gmail.com> wrote: > I see a huge difference in the files from my Monochrom and the color > files from the M240 converted to B&W. Tina On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 10:25 AM, > George Lottermoser < george.imagist at icloud.com> wrote: > The Fuji cameras > obviously deliver beautiful digital files; at an > extremely affordable price > when compared to the Leicas which they emulate. > And essentially this article > says, "here's a nice camera, that looks almost > just like a leica, which can > turn it's RGB files into Grayscale files (just > like every other digital > camera available). > > Of course the same points could be made for my M8, and > M; or the M9, M-E; > or if you let go of the range finder < any mirror-less > camera on the market. > > a note off the iPad, George > > On Sep 19, 2014, at > 6:54 AM, Douglas Nygren via LUG <lug at leica-users.org> > wrote: > > > Attached > is a link to an article describing using the Fuji X100s to do > black and > white photograph. > > > > Given the high cost of the Monochrom, this may be a > good alternative. > X100S is a camera Leica should have made, but didn't. > > > > > I look forward to reading your comments. > > Doug > > > > The Fuji > Monochrom By James Conley > > > > > > > > The Fuji Monochrom By James Conley > > > The Fuji Monochrom By James Conley A major impediment most new > > photographers face is that color is the default mode of expression. Not > only > are we inundated by ... > > View on www.stevehuffphoto.com Preview by > Yahoo >