POINT OF VIEW
Established
This one is in the rangefinder magazine. The review is by Hollister, a landscape photographer. The article is very accurate, in my opinion. http://www.rangefindermag.com/magazine/Dec07/176.pdf
sitemistic said:A balanced article on the M8, I think. I was puzzled by his comment on the depth of color in the RAW files, I assume before he manipulates them. That pretty much is determined by the default settings of the RAW converter, as RAW files are only data off the sensor.
I'm still not convinced, though, that a rangefinder camera is the optimal tool for landscape photography, which takes nothing away from the M8.
sitemistic said:I keep thinking there is a price point at which even Leica enthusiasts will balk.
Holmz said:If anyone is really serious about Landscape I'll trade my 4x5 for a M8 either as a short term deal or longer. The 4x5 cannot be beat.


Richard Marks said:5x4 cant be beat in terms of absolute quality however there are always compromises its slow its heavy processing and either printing or scanning E6 is becoming a pain, and unless enlarging really big, the differences are not as big as you may think sure an E6 5x4 tranny looks increadible but unless you are spendning a lot of money its easy to loose the advantage at the printing stage
Richard Marks said:I do use my M8 for landscapes and this is the reason for my rather unfortunate tripod accident.
The gray grad issue i get round by bracketing multiple raw images. Its a pain to sew them together but ultimately nice results.
gdi said:Yes, polarizers and GND filters for one - and now I am thinking the weak mounting of the baseplate is another for tripod work (after postings regarding failures)...
sitemistic said:Infocus, do you think Leica will actually produce an R-Digital camera? Who knows if it would blow Nikon and Canon out of the weeds, but we do know it would cost twice as much, at least. Not sure who the potential customer would be for a $16,000 digital slr that would compete with the 1Ds MkIII.
Richard Marks said:5x4 cant be beat in terms of absolute quality however there are always compromises
its slow its heavy
processing and either printing or scanning E6 is becoming a pain, and unless enlarging really big, the differences are not as big as you may think
sure an E6 5x4 tranny looks increadible but unless you are spendning a lot of money its easy to loose the advantage at the printing stage
I do use my M8 for landscapes and this is the reason for my rather unfortunate tripod accident.
The gray grad issue i get round by bracketing multiple raw images. Its a pain to sew them together but ultimately nice results.
still bothered about the tripod mounting . Am thinking about some means that holds the whole body
best wishes
richard
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No it is not the same!grduprey said:The tripod mount on the M8 is the same type and method used on all the thousands of M series cameras over the past 50+ years. Only the location has changed. I used mine on the tripod mount 100% of the time my wrist and arm was in a cast earlier this year (10 weeks). I mounted it to my hand grip from the shoulder mount on my 560 Telyt and never any looseness or weak moments what so ever. The one documented tripod mount damage, was most likely a manufacturing flaw in the particular sample. Absolutely no reason not to trust the tripod mount.
Gene