To re-phrase that only slightly:
What you gain from 35 mm is the ability to capture the decisive moment, catch the lightning in the bottle - if you can't, or have nothing to say, or have a poor grasp of technique, 35 mm will expose you mercilessly.
What you gain, or rather lose, from LF is an in-built tendency to obsess about technique and an intrinsically slower working tempo, which in many situations (such as photographing in the typically changing weather conditions of the UK) can lead to a fatal failure to deliver results. If you can rise above this, and express yourself artistically on a level where rendition of detail and plasticity of tone are part of your creative vocabulary and not ends in themselves, then LF work can be sublime - otherwise, it's a total blind alley!
I've been reading this thread and it really has become one big pile of horse shit. Somebody please lock it up.
I've been reading this thread and it really has become one big pile of horse shit. Somebody please lock it up.
Oh, go on! Enlighten us with your superior wisdom! It's what APUG is all about!
I thought the notion (or lotion) was about which male uses large format as a penile enhancer, which male uses medium format as an aphrodisiac and which male uses 35 mm as sex toy?The real problem here is a bunch of old stale stinky notions on why someone chooses a particular format for a particular photograph.
Arguing against a set of weakness from a set of strengths and vice versa as if your reasoning points the only one true way to make a negative is simply a circle jerk of stupefying magnitude.
I thought the notion (or lotion) was about which male uses large format as a penile enhancer, which male uses medium format as an aphrodisiac and which male uses 35 mm as sex toy?
Did I get it wrong again?
Regards, Art.
You left out the chicken.
I use a Leica and a ShenHao about equally. Never put the Leica on a tripod and never use the 4x5 without one. I never use a meter with the Leica, and take several minutes to take spot readings with the 4x5 and develop stictly according to zone system tests. With the Leica I often go from noticing a shot to exposing in under 5 secs, with the ShenHao it's more like a half hour. They are both wonderful approaches to photography but they do different things. Doing both extremes keeps me hungry and on my toes, but comparing them to see which is better is a futile exercise. I couldn't make the shots I make with my M2 on a ShenHao, and the M2 couldn't dream of the quality of the prints I get from my ShenHao.
Not to criticise you in any way but ...
In my youth I worked as a photographer (one of ten or twelve) for the V&A Museum in London. Much of the work involved studio shots with 8x10" or 5x7" cameras, but I also used to do press and publicity shots. More or less at random, I would use either a 4x5" Speed Graphic (for fun, the era of 4x5" as the standard choice for press had already passed) loaded with HP3 and equipped with a 150 Xenar (good but not the greatest of all lenses) or else a Leica IIIf equipped with a 50 Summicron, 35 Summaron or 28 Summaron and loaded with Pan F. I used to print the 4x5" on a De Vere cold cathode enlarger with a TTH lens (again, good but not the greatest of all lenses) and the 35 mm on a Leitz Focomat, in each case up to 8x10". Almost no one could tell which camera I had used for which shot!
I am not guessing because I like it. I am guessing because I don't have the time, in this particular kind of shooting, to use a spot meter and take careful readings. If I did, I would. But my eye is as good a meter as I have access to in the quick pace of street shooting - far better than some center weighted meter that thinks everything is middle gray and doesn't account for how the subject is illuminated. In fact I wouldn't call it guessing but "metering by eye." I would think a center weighted in camera meter would screw this shot up beyond repair, and I couldn't really have grabbed my sekonic and hollered "hold it right there, fellas!"I might add that I have never believed in guessing exposure with 35 mm - I am sure it works for youbut a stop of over-exposure means a LOT more grain!
Not to criticise you in any way but ...
In my youth I worked as a photographer (one of ten or twelve) for the V&A Museum in London . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I would use either a 4x5" Speed Graphic . . . . . . . . loaded with HP3 and equipped with a 150 Xenar . . . . . . . . . . or else a Leica IIIf equipped with a 50 Summicron,. . . . . . . . . . . . Almost no one could tell which camera I had used for which shot! . . . . . . . .
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