Alan
Newbie
I can only use wide angle lens with my L and it's the only camera I have. is the 25mm to wide for environment protrait? I know you should use a short tele for protrait, but would it work? Thanks
Alan said:I can only use wide angle lens with my L and it's the only camera I have. is the 25mm to wide for environment protrait? I know you should use a short tele for protrait, but would it work? Thanks
tedwhite said:Bertram:
I thoroughly enjoyed your Paris photographs. Brought back recherchez du temps perdu. (I lived on Rue du Bac in 1971). As I have just ordered the Bessa L and the 25/4 your photos reassured me that I had made a wise choice. (Please don't think that because I used a few french words that I speak French. Actually that's the title of Marcel Proust's novel, as I'm sure you know).
During that year there was considerable resentment toward Americans. I could speak no French at all. However, I did speak Spanish, so I reinvented myself as a Mexican and got along rather well. I would walk right into a restaurant, accost the maitre de, and say, "¿Buenas noches...que hay de comer?" Sometimes he would summon a Spanish menial from the kitchen who would steer me toward a good meal at a reasonable price.
I worked under the table as a consultant to a publishing company (Gallimard). They were translating some US paperbacks into French. Great fun.
I have the Bessa R with the 35/2.5 and it's a great and sharp lens. But I needed something wider.
Thanks again for the fine photographs.
Ted
Not at all of course. For that purpose you need a shift lens or a LF camera. If there is no room to step backyou MUST tilt normal camera backwards of course. But the level helps to avoid tilting where you can avoid it. And that happens very often.tedwhite said:As for the level, I'm not sure I understand. If you are in front of a building by necessity (most of the time) you will have to tilt the camera upward. How does a level solve that problem?
Ted