Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2018/11/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]gotta love a comebback! Stay strong and steady ric > On Nov 29, 2018, at 8:46 PM, Ken Iisaka <ken at iisaka.org> wrote: > > After 5 years without a Leica, (Leica branded Panasonic lenses don?t count) > I'm finally back in the fold, after acquiring a lightly used SL with an > SL50. > > I was a Leica M user for many years, having owned a slew of M cameras: an > M3, an M5, a couple of M6s, then finally an M8, with a variety of lenses > from Noctilux 1:1,0/50 to Summilux 1:1,4/75 and APO-Summicron 1:2,0/90. > Also had a reflex camera and a few lenses: an SL2 MOT, with several lenses > from 24mm to 400mm. > > I loved using them because of their simplicity and utmost optical and build > quality. They were transparent in my hands, and they translated my > intentions into photographs with few obstacles, something I could not say > of other equipment I had used. > > My most frequent subjects were my two children, of course, who are now > adults now. > > I lost them all in a divorce, along with just about everything else that > could be taken away from me, due to the nuclear-options deployed in the > conflict. I was reduced to nothing. > > I had continued to take photographs using an Olympus system, around a body > that my girlfriend gave me a couple of years ago, after seeing I was > enjoying using the one that I rented for a trip to Hong Kong, Taiwan and > Japan. Its compactness meant I took it on many trips since, as I began > spreading my wings again. > > But its fiddly controls meant I often missed moments I wanted to capture. I > was painfully aware that I shouldn?t be faced with so many dials and > buttons to control just a few things: aperture, shutter speed, focus, > composition and timing. > > But my life situation has improved especially in the last two years. As I > celebrated a major birthday milestone a month ago (the new 30, as they say) > I finally allowed myself this indulgence. > > I agonized a bit between an M and an SL, but I chose the latter, after > having become accustomed to a mirror-less system. It?s an evolution, and > it?s the right direction forward, as evident in Nikon and Canon?s recent > entry to the field. > > I also looked at Sony, Nikon and Canon, too, but all the buttons and dials > turned me off. They would have certainly given me better quality > photographs than my little Olympus, but not necessarily better shooting > experience. > > But it?s quite a jump from an Olympus system to an SL. The latter easily > weighs thrice as much, and costs 5x. But seeing how much wear the Olympus > has gotten in just two years, I am confident that the SL body will last 10 > years easily, and the lens probably until I can no longer hold it steadily. > > I will likely acquire a 24-90, and possibly a couple of M lenses to be used > with an adapter. I will likely keep using the Olympus where I need a super > portable camera with my favorite lens on it: a Panasonic-Leica Summilux > 1:1,7/15. However, I suspect I may want a Q to replace it eventually. It?s > also that a fast M wide angle lens costs as much as a Q anyway. Q almost > seems like a bargain, actually. > > As far as my life goes, I have regained, or am gaining back most of what I > lost. I now live with a loving partner, sharing a house full of grand > pianos, filling the air with music. I am able to do more of what I wasn?t > able during the 18 years of abusive marriage. Nothing will erase the pain > of struggles I experienced in the last 10 years, but my life is now better > than ever. A Leica was just one of the key ingredients to ?complete? my > life again. Going from an M system to an SL system is perhaps a metaphor > for the evolution of my life, too. > > Folks, I am back, stronger than ever. > > -- > Ken Iisaka > first name at last name dot org or com > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information