Hi Cal,
you are one of the few people who have seen my prints of images captured with the Monochrome (MM, 18MP CCD), mostly shot with the 75Apo 'cron, handheld. One shot was cropped to half frame, printed 20x30 on 24x36 by ConeEdition using Piezography on Hanemühle FA Baryta. " You can see the peach fuss" That's printed resolution from a 9MP captured file. I have been milking IQ in those shots. Bright sunlight, lowest ISO, shot wide open, B&W yellow filter, 1/1000s or shorter, careful focussing, holding my breath etc. but still handheld.
And printing was not a bargain but the only possible option with Jon Cone. All this effort you don't make for any images, they have to be worth it. If you do care about the image you can squeeze amazing quality out of existing tools.
If you have a boring still life shot and you can help it using a Phase One with 100MP and have it printed on fancy paper with high res etc but what you will get is a high quality print of a boring image that looks impressive just because of the high end tools that have been used. Technical capability is used to cover up lack of artistic vision, rant mode off .. oh wait where did I turn it on?😀
Klaus,
The original 18 MP Monochron is a very capable camera in the right hands for sure. I believe that it will be somewhat of a cult camera one day. For one I think it has a unique rendering due to its CCD sensor.
Also I would argue that it is likely the most unforgiving digital camera camera because of the lack of Bayer Filter Array compounded by the CCD sensor. CMOS sensors and color cameras are more forgiving in recovering highlights.
You do make a great point that many shooters don't necessarily fully exploit their gear, but I know from seeing the results in your prints printed by Jon Cone's Studio that you approached the max that a MM could produce.
I think it was a smart move to retain our MM cameras. Also know that out of all the digital cameras two stand out as being the most like a basic film camera: the Leica CL (Digital Barnack); and the original Monochrom.
I can list all the things that make it a primitive camera: the not so good high ISO when compared to a M-246; the crappy screen; the slow small buffer; the lack of video capabilities; no live view... For me the slow performance and basic utility combined make my MM most like a film camera.
Not everybody fully exploits the resolution, IQ, or tonality like we have.
I believe your Jon Cone prints were 20x30 on 24x36. They were stunning.
BTW when I showed off that small 13x17 inch print of the Domino Sugar Refinery on the East River taken from the Williamsburg Bridge to the crew at the Leica booth at a PhotoPlusExpo they could not believe it was shot with the Monochrom. LOL.
Richard Herzog, a large format shooter, thought it was shot with a large format camera.
Also we know that we can print what we can't see on a dimmed down EIZO in a darkened room. We know that we can print what you can't see. Also "big prints don't lie."
Christian once pointed out the lightning rods on a smokestack that were visible on a 20x30 print that were over a quarter mile away on the Domino Refinery.
Cal
POSTSCRIPT: Sometime in early December "Maggie" has a gig where we will be on a luxury river cruise that begins in Amsterdam, stops at about half a dozen cities on the Rhine River, and ends in Switzerland. I'll let you know our itinerary, but I don't know if I'll have the time to hook-up with you.