Ronny
Well-known
It is so easy - Take a look:
http://lejournaldelaphotographie.com/fullscreen/10022
http://lejournaldelaphotographie.com/fullscreen/10022
It is so easy - Take a look:
http://lejournaldelaphotographie.com/fullscreen/10022
Dear Vince,. . . There are simply no great photographers who say, regarding equipment, oh just give me any old thing, it doesn't matter. But there are none as well who would say that only the best equipment can make the best photographs.
It is so easy - Take a look:
http://lejournaldelaphotographie.com/fullscreen/10022
Instead of being literal-minded about respondents' relationship to technical matters, you could instead view the response with regard to what use it serves them. Said response massages an ego that risks bruising by association with a poor lens with the common recourse that it's the photographer who makes great pictures. Surely by now you know how closely some identify with their gear.Point out that any given lens is (for example) not very sharp, lacks contrast or suffers from field curvature, and immediately, someone pops up and says, "Yeah, but you can still take great pictures with it."
Not untrue.Instead of being literal-minded about respondents' relationship to technical matters, you could instead view the response with regard to what use it serves them. Said response massages an ego that risks bruising by association with a poor lens with the common recourse that it's the photographer who makes great pictures. Surely by now you know how closely some identify with their gear.
As for Pan F at EI 1600, well, what stops you is insane contrast and absolute lack of shadow detail. You get about ISO 80 in Microphen.
Cheers,
R.
Dear Rob,I do miss Tech-Pan @ EI 200...
Is there a (I hate to say it) better way to get similar results these days?
More to the point of this thread, Roger, is this:
I've noticed in real life as well as on-line that there are folks who reject better/worse thinking and there are other folks who think it obvious that some things are better and some are worse and neither group of folks seems to be able to talk to each other.
Rob
Dear Rob,Let my try to make my point, err, better;
I know too many people that confuse their perceptions of better/worse and how much that matters as something objective rather than a subjective thing.
A couple of illustrations might help me be clearer.
1) A long time ago I had a friend in school who would ask questions like: "Which band do you like better, the Who or the Rolling Stones?"
When I answered "I like the Stones better."
His response to that was "Wrong! The Who are better because..."
It took me a while to realize that he was not really looking for my opinion but was looking for a starting point to impose his opinion on me or, maybe, to build or reinforce some kind of social standing in our school.
When I tried to tell him that There was NO wrong answer to his question, he simply could not grasp what I was talking about.
Sadly, he still parses questions like this.
2) I have said here at RFF and in real life that I quite like my Jupiter-8 lens in spite of the fact that there are any number of better 50mm lenses I could use.
For me to deny the real progress in lens making and design in the 50 or so years since that lens was made is irrational at least.
But at the same time, I like the results I get with it, I've used it long enough that I can make it work for me. And in some fairly specific circumstances, I will suggest trying one.
Rob
When I answered "I like the Stones better."
His response to that was "Wrong! The Who are better because..."
Dear Vince,
This sums up what I was trying to say, better than I said it.
Cheers,
R.
Highlight: Also the simple point that if someone asks for a lens recommendation, by definition more or less from a position of ignorance (or they'd be answering the question, not asking it), then in the absence of their being highly specific about what they want -- cheap, low-contrast, very small, whatever -- then the best recommendation is normally a sharp, general-purpose, affordable lens. Such lenses got popular by satisfying a lot of people.Dear Roger,
Many thanks. I think you were saying something more as well (perhaps about the general tendency we all can fall prey to, losing sight of the differences between collectors' hobbies and art -- that's my interpretation anyway). I'm glad to have contributed to the discussion.