vitaly66
slightly tilted
@Timmyjoe , @Zuiko-logist , @Evergreen States - thank you for the comments! (I was worried the recent forest/nature images might get me banned from RFF ;>)
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Zuiko-logist
Well-known
@Timmyjoe , @Zuiko-logist , @Evergreen States - thank you for the comments! (I was worried the recent forest/nature images might get me banned from RFF ;>)
Indeed!
vitaly66
slightly tilted
vitaly66
slightly tilted
Disappointed_Horse
Well-known
Just because you have no access to the river, it doesn't mean the river has no access to you.
vitaly66
slightly tilted
vitaly66
slightly tilted
Posted yesterday, New York Times "Wirecutter" article on using digital monochrome cameras, "The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography" by Phil Ryan:
The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography
The article comments on both the Pentax K-3iii Monochrome and Leica M11 Monochrom cameras, with well-processed sample images from each.
The main gist of the article, though, is more of a general discussion of the special attributes of b&w-only sensors -- along with some of the whys and wherefores of using them.
The article closes with the question: "Should you get a digital black-and-white camera?"
And suggests the answer for most people will be, "Probably not."
(Read on to discover why -- if you are an active RFF member -- the answer could more likely be "YES!")
The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography
The article comments on both the Pentax K-3iii Monochrome and Leica M11 Monochrom cameras, with well-processed sample images from each.
The main gist of the article, though, is more of a general discussion of the special attributes of b&w-only sensors -- along with some of the whys and wherefores of using them.
The article closes with the question: "Should you get a digital black-and-white camera?"
And suggests the answer for most people will be, "Probably not."
(Read on to discover why -- if you are an active RFF member -- the answer could more likely be "YES!")
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vitaly66
slightly tilted
agentlossing
Well-known
Decent article!Posted yesterday, New York Times "Wirecutter" article on using digital monochrome cameras, "The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography" by Phil Ryan:
The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography
The article comments on both the Pentax K-3iii Monochrome and Leica M11 Monochrom cameras, with well-processed sample images from each.
The main gist of the article, though, is more of a general discussion of the special attributes of b&w-only sensors -- along with some of the whys and wherefores of using them.
The article closes with the question: "Should you get a digital black-and-white camera?"
And suggests the answer for most people will be, "Probably not."
(Read on to discover why -- if you are an active RFF member -- the answer could more likely be "YES!")
Freakscene
Obscure member
The ‘should you’ question is almost entirely personal.Posted yesterday, New York Times "Wirecutter" article on using digital monochrome cameras, "The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography" by Phil Ryan:
The Anachronistic Joy of Black-and-White Photography
The article comments on both the Pentax K-3iii Monochrome and Leica M11 Monochrom cameras, with well-processed sample images from each.
The main gist of the article, though, is more of a general discussion of the special attributes of b&w-only sensors -- along with some of the whys and wherefores of using them.
The article closes with the question: "Should you get a digital black-and-white camera?"
And suggests the answer for most people will be, "Probably not."
(Read on to discover why -- if you are an active RFF member -- the answer could more likely be "YES!")
The images are well-processed, but the Leica ones, particularly the middle two, show the result of the interaction between the strange Leica metering - I’ll bet that the reviewer didn’t have the highlight weighted metering turned on - and inexperienced image processing. The learning curve on the Pentax is much les steep - which is saying something, because it’s still pretty steep.
Marty
vitaly66
slightly tilted
vitaly66
slightly tilted
vitaly66
slightly tilted
vitaly66
slightly tilted
agentlossing
Well-known
I gotta say, I love your titles. There's an art to titling photographs and if it's done wrong, it comes off very bad, but you do it very right!
Freakscene
Obscure member
The Zeiss approach to contrast and maintaining coarse scale contrast at ~5 lp/mm works really well with these cameras. The ZK 25mm is the same design as the Contax Yashica lens which was introduced with the Contax RTS SLR system in 1975.
vitaly66
slightly tilted
vitaly66
slightly tilted
What I like most about the Distagon is the focal length -- 25mm is just great on APS-C. I'm not as keen on the size and weight, about 3x heavier and longer than the average Pentax DA limited lens :<The Zeiss approach to contrast and maintaining coarse scale contrast at ~5 lp/mm works really well with these cameras. The ZK 25mm is the same design as the Contax Yashica lens which was introduced with the Contax RTS SLR system in 1975.
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vitaly66
slightly tilted
Zuiko-logist
Well-known
Really like this.
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