George Mann
Member
Has anyone ever laid their hands on the Japan-only Leica phones?
Do these have sufficiently large sensors and a real lens?
Has anyone ever laid their hands on the Japan-only Leica phones?
Obviously any phone camera will have a tiny sensor.sufficiently large sensors
There might be a phone inside that lens, though.Dont think I have seen such a lens in a phone yet
Modern phones are surprisingly good cameras, by the way.
But a Barnack Leica is 1000 times more tactile and far less complicated than a phone, someone said above.
On my phone, I press one button, and it takes a photograph. A Barnack Leica requires a few more steps.
But a Barnack Leica uses the physical integrity of film and you are dissengaged from what your phone is doing on your behalf. After taking the picture you view what your phone has captured. I'm confident I know what a Barnack camera has captured.
I'm confident I know what a Barnack camera has captured.
The picture and the story it tells is all that matters.
How you choose to get there is irrelevant.
Some choose higher levels of pain compared to others who choose the easy road.
Whatever floats your boat.
There is a world of difference between what we see and what we present as seen.
You can paint a turd pink, but it's still a turd.
You can certainly hand-color a turd pink with a print from film.No, with digital you can paint a turd pink, but with film you can photograph a turd as it is.
[...]
Some choose higher levels of pain compared to others who choose the easy road.
Whatever floats your boat.
Aint that the truth now.
It really depends. I find it just as difficult to make a good shot with digital or film.
Film introduces many possibilities for errors after it has been shot, something that does not occur with digital.
It really depends. I find it just as difficult to make a good shot with digital or film. Film introduces many possibilities for errors after it has been shot, something that does not occur with digital.
The margin for error with film is greatly diminished with applied knowledge and experience, and particularly, conceptualisation and visualisation of the scene and how one carries it effectively to film. This often profound lack of conceptualisation and visualisation in digital is the prime reason we see so much dramatically altered – "souped up" imaging on the interwebby. What they cannot do with a/in-camera they turn to a computer (or worse, Ai). This is a travesty, not a triumph. Learn to do everything in-camera, reliably and consistently, using the grey matter between the ears and the vast mental library that you reference for guidance.
Sure, there are lots with little taste or "eye" for what makes an image good and they can easily go overboard with digital editing and "filters." I was considering how one could mess up film (leaving it in the heat, poor processing and handling for example). I have also seen way too many terrible photos shot on film, sometimes with very expensive or exotic and well-respected equipment, that I would throw in the trash in an instant. The photographers in those cases were proud enough of their accomplishments to post them to photographic forums as examples of their great gear and experience.Well, I'm not sure about that. I've seen some pretty shocking digital edits published as 'the real deal'.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |