Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Charles Cason wrote: > > I had my first leica M2 in the early sixties when I found one in a pawn > shop. I traded a .38 special detective special for it. It had a dual > range f2 Summicron. Down in Georgia, revolvers were more sought after > than strange cameras. Anyway, I was taking a lot of pictures inside of > churches. Some times with ceiling lights (I never used a flash) and > sometimes with just light through the stained glass windows. A friend > put me on to the "upside down" method that works well for me. Maybe > everyone does it, but I haven't seen it mentioned lately. I would stand > with my back and head against a wall, or column, think about the > highlights I wanted, and turn the camera upside down and place in > against my forehead. Then with the side of my thumb, I could press the > shutter release. I would take 5 or six pictures like this, using no > more film than with bracketing, and usually would get a pretty sharp > photo. I have even done it for 1 second and managed to get what I > wanted. Of course I threw a lot of slides away before anyone saw > them. That was over 30 years ago and I was not so shaky. But it was > an alternative when I couldn't afford a flash or tripod. I'd like to > hear of other simple but useful leica "tricks" for LUGers. > Thanks for listening. > Charles Cason Wow! I have never heard of a 38 special with a duel range Summicron, neat. John