Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/08/12

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Subject: Re: Seeing (was: Blind test)
From: jay coleman <jcoleman@interport.net>
Date: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 20:30:04 -0400

>Oddmund -

While I often agree with, and always enjoy, your postings to this list,
I think
we all need to be more tolerant and open-minded about why we enjoy
photography,
Leica or otherwise.  There are many reasons why each individual gets
pleasure
or satisfaction from photography -- no one should judge another's basis
for
enjoyment.

I have a good friend, for example, who knows MUCH more about lighting,
film
exposure/development, and printing than I do.  But I rarely see this
fellow's
pictures.  He loves Phil Davis' book Beyond the Zone System, he measures
his
negatives with a densitometer, he can produce the "perfect" print. 
Bottom line
is my friend may get more satisfaction from solving technical lighting,
development, or printing problems as he does from "seeing" the world,
taking
pictures, or hanging prints on the wall.  He enjoys these technical
challenges,
and who is to say that he is into photography for the "wrong" reasons.

Some people like Leicas because they are beautiful machines.  They
appreciate
the camera's design and construction.  Some people like Leicas because
they
have a history ranging from HCB to Capa.  Some people see the camera as
simply
a tool that helps them to see the world, etc.  It's ok to be an
engineer, or a
collector, or a humanitarian with regard to Leica.

If someone wants to take snaps with their M6, who knows why they want to
do
this, and frankly, who cares?  Maybe they like the "click" of the
shutter when
they press it.  Maybe they "wear" their Leica as a status symbol -- a
worse
case scenario.  But even here, so what, they may actually enjoy using
the
camera.

I enjoy hearing about how and why you use your Leica and your Contax. 
This
list benefits from your perspective.  But it's "ok" to not be like you. 
We
don't have to have the same reasons for using our Leicas that you have
for
using, or not using, yours.  It's a greater error, in my opinion, for
Leica
owners to feel that they must pretend to own Leicas for the "right"
reasons
(i.e. to record the world's travails like Salgado, etc.) than it is to
be
honest about owning a Leica for a less than noble reason.

John McLeod<

Well said.

Jay Coleman