Riccis
Well-known
More technical info can be found in Thorsten Overgaard's interview
http://www.overgaard.dk/leica-M9-digital-rangefinder-camera-page-6.html
Thank you. Believe it or not, I am not a very technical guy but I hope this also helps.
More technical info can be found in Thorsten Overgaard's interview
http://www.overgaard.dk/leica-M9-digital-rangefinder-camera-page-6.html
Riccis is great! he shoots more than Leica film cameras too.
Yes, he also shoots a Rollei TLR, a Pentax 67 and a Widelux.
I recently got out of the wedding industry myself and was pretty excited to have stumbled onto Riccis' work earlier this year and to see that he shoots weddings almost exclusively Leica. As noted above, his black and white work is outstanding.
What a wonderful business model! I do however wonder why he doesn't develop his own film considering his statement early in the article about not wanting to outsource post production. Regardless, the photos still look great!
thumbs up!
I agree....the last wedding I did I used a combination of film and digital. It worked out well and by word of mouth I have gotten calls asking about doing film weddings.
I was never comfortable processing wedding film either due to my REALLY clumsy hands along with the need for total darkness. My dark room is fine for printing but too porus for film.
Riccis work and vision is outstanding, knows his subject matter,ability to use the SUB-PAR, manual focus, old tech. leica m cameras, i wonder if many younger wedding photogs. could make the transition without auto everything canons & nikons. willing to rely on there ability instead of the cameras.
You're right. That's not very logical. On one side he couldn't outsource the digital postprocessing, while on the other hand he outsources the film postprocessing 😕
That way, he's not tied down with processing all the rolls, doing the scans, etc. He notes he can better spend the time serving clients and looking for new ones. And as pointed out above, what if something went wrong with his processing, since this event can't be repeated? Better to send it out to a highly-regarded lab like Richard, who do this every day, in volume.
The point is: if he can rely on someone for development and print so he could rely on a professional for digital postprocessing.
But it seems that it pays off for him.
In the old days, '70s and '80s many of us used to send our film out to large custom labs that did wonderful work. While in the Army in Germany in the early to mid '70s, I had a photo business on the side and sent every roll to a lab in FL for proofing and then portrait reprints, wedding packages, and memory mate style youth athletic stuff. Knock on wood, I never lost a roll of 35mm or 120 film, and had the same results getting prints back. I have a few of my sample prints from that era in an album and they have barely faded in all that time. If I had a business now I would try to find a lab like Richard's on the East Coast, or, failing that send them to LA. Confidence in the lab you use sure does make the time available for other business and personal projects.
Riccis work is incredible. Haven't read the article in my Rangefinder yet. Got asked to shoot a friends wedding next Saturday using film. Can't touch Riccis work but the inspiration is on time. Great blog too!
Riccis is pure class. He is an amazing photographer and he is one of the nicest guys I have ever interacted with on the net. He is the reason I am shooting leica and his work is timeless and just beautiful.
Nice guy: great spirit and great shots... When he said "less is more" and said he uses 21, 28, 35, 50, 90, 135, M3, MP and M9, did he mean "less is less" or "more is more"? 😉
Cheers,
Juan
If I could hazard a guess I think what they mean is that he's got his own routine to give his images the look that he knows he gets every time from a certain film as long as it's done right (ie nothing really out of the ordinary), and that he doesnt trust the digital labs to do this specific sort of thing consistently. To solve that, he would have to train someone who he could check up on regularly, I guess.
I imagine that his post routine was rather involved.
How many weddings are "digital" today? 99%+ I assume. One wedding photographer serving a niche is not a reason to celebrate anything.
I like Riccis's wedding photography however my favorite wedding stuff is by this guy,
http://oneperfectmoment.com/blog/
he does beautifull flash work.
I love Riccis' work! He's the reason why I ditched my heavy dslrs and jumped in to Leica's for wedding work. He's my idol!
Thanks for posting that one. I looked at his work and love it.