Thursday, September 9, 2010

abolute sharpness is overated.

I am starting to fall in love with old leica glass specfically mandler era glass. My mentor prefers even older leitz glass.
Basically pre asph lens allow a continuity of vision across planes. This is prefered since i make pictures with multiple subjects often counter-balancing each other. Some might describe it as painterly.

Modern lens have the of kind of sharpness that calls attention to itself. When accurately focused it can create out of world kind of imagery. But if inaccurately done it screams error.

These problem are often at large aperture say 2.8 and wider.

Another thing is that when viewing on LCD it seems that sharpness is magnified. When on matte print it is less the case.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

KISS printing.

Its a horror to print your pictures. Color incorrect argh..
Its ok if you are the expressionist but for protraits family shots it a pain.

Black and white you might face color cast warm/neutral you never quite sure

Suggestion: BW
USE specialize ink
http://www.inksupply.com/bwpage.cfm

A3+ you can use Epson stylus office 1100 (asia)IE workforce 1100 for (north america)
For better sharper detail print you can get Epson R1900 better as the droplet size is smaller.
But workforce 1100 with MIS ink doesn't seem to need to deal with as much software work.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Hi craig, Contact sheet.

Just for fun here is a "contact sheet". I been shooting less fromm 3 rolls to the current half roll.

Its always nice to meet someone who loves the rangefinder way.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

bene123


bene123, originally uploaded by chiif.

If you are wondering how I look like ....

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

L1005746


L1005746, originally uploaded by bene123.

Making pictures

Its easy to take good pictures.
Its managableble to make excllent photos.
But excellent photos that are yours and only yours and true to yourself well that is difficult.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Publishing

I don't publish much if at all. Because I'm never certain if my pictures are of any good. It takes time a lot of time to condense your mind and form a good body of work. I don't know what I'm doing so often what u think is good now might not be in the future. I'm really lucky to have a mentor with very sharp eyes to see whats going on.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Thursday, July 29, 2010

For love of Leica and its Zen (http://www.39eastphotography.com/)

Erwin Puts website says it all. A zen, a kind of peace.
First on Emotions behind the Lens we have
39 EastPhotography photographer Mr Kuang On why Leica.

With his essay he sent 11 pictures. I looked over them and decided to post these 2 pictures. They were not the ones I first picked out but on viewing them a few rounds these 2 really stuck.
He captured silence. The silence that comes with the sanctity of marriage.





His Non Wedding Picture


This picture good for its realism. Look at the smiles. Look at the contrast between the motivated protestor holding the the sign "Not school" versus the protestor "Cutting education hurts " who seem lost as one would feel in such a event. Look at the way protestors are are looking at different directions which make your eyes dart back and forth within the frame.




His Reply :

“Why don’t you get a real camera?” yelled one of the guests as I raised my Leica MP to my eye. I smiled a secret smile as the cloth shutter made a muffled click. The moment captured. For many of the guests at the weddings I photograph, my choice of equipment seems like an oddity. In an age where equipment is everything, the megapixel count reigns supreme and bigger is better, sometimes I question my choice of Leica rangefinders as a tool as well.

After all, aren’t modern cameras from Nikon and Canon supposed to make my life, as a professional wedding photographer, easier? With an endless supply of shots on a card, instant review, ISO limits that was only imaginable on film, countless lenses to choose from, lightning fast autofocus, machine gun fast motor drives…

Ironically, as a professional photographer, I have found that the latest greatest digital cameras have in fact made my life as a photographer more difficult. The choices digital cameras offer in shooting modes create the onset of the “paralysis of analysis.” Continuous motor drives encourages me to shoot without going through a thought process behind each and every image. Autofocus for some never seems to lock onto exactly the point I want it. Half the time, I’m battling the brains of these cameras and trying to understand the camera.

Whenever I pick up my Leica rangefinders, there is a certain serenity I feel as a photographer. With no automated modes to choose from and only 3 variables to really think about, aperture, shutter speed, and focus, there is a clarity to the picture taking process. In fact with my exposure preset for the lighting conditions, all I think about is my focus, composition and timing… Photography in its purest form.

Over the year, many of my digital cameras have come and gone. I’ve been through just about every canon and Nikon digital slr, but after all these years, my leica MPs are still the cameras I have by my side, ready to capture moments on short notice or in my case every weekend when I’m out shooting a wedding.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

THe right camera for the right Job.

Ben Lifson - 9/8/2001
I understand that I'm taking a certain liberty in replying to this, in the way that I'm about to, but you've framed your question so honestly, so thoughtfully--honest about your confusion, sincere, obviously, about your search for an answer (answers?)--that I figure a) I should reply, since I do have something to say, and b) to reply any less honestly and sincerely than you wrote would be disrespectful to yourself.

Now you don't ask about a camera or a technique that can obtain an effect or make a certain kind of picture that has so far eluded you. For example, in the mid-1970s a lot of photographers went to the Fuji 6x9cm rangefinder camera because "I want something almost as fast as a 35mm camera, and I want the proportions of the 35mm negative (24x36mm= 2:3), but I want better definition of detail, but I don't want to use a 5x7 view camera, in fact, I don't want to use a view camera at all, I want to photograph in crowds, public places, parks, etc. and not be observed, and I want a rangefinder because it's quieter, and I like looking through plain glass rather than onto an SLR screen."

I don't think your question is specific, like the above.

So the answer to your question as you've framed it, is: THE CAMERA IS NEVER THE KEY TO MAKING GOOD PICTURES. Also THERE IS NO TECHNICAL STANDARD FOR A GOOD PHOTOGRAPH.

Case in Point: The sculptor Constantin Brancusi's (1920s) photographs of his own work, made with a view camera, great lighting (skylight, etc.) processed carefully in his own darkroom, but printed with the utmost carelessness. When he printed he allowed light to leak into his darkroom, he wouldn't pay attention to how long he fixed the prints, he'd let the still wet prints fall onto the darkroom floor and he wouldhn't wash them off before drying them...All of this was highly intentional...The finished prints were often rough, stained, dirty, fading...They're absolutely fabulous pictures, highly prized by collectors for their beauty, and when they come onto the market they costs at least thousands if not tens of thousands of dollars each (it's been a long time since I've looked).

Case in Point: A book called "Portraits and Dreams" by Wendy Ewald, pictures by 8-14 yr old children in small villages in Appalachian Mtn region of Kentucky, Ewald taught these children to photograph, Kodak provided the cameras--the cheapest: plastic lenses, etc.--the children built their own darkroom, developed, printed their own pictures...These are beautiful pictures, they're now in the collections of several museums all over the world, and they won Ewald a MacArthur Foundation ("genius") Fellowship, something like over $250,000, to continue her work with children, which she's done in Colobmia, Calcutta, South Africa and other places where the children are the poorest of the poor and in her teaching with absolutely the cheapest cameras available they are making, all over the world, very beautiful pictures.

YOUR ANXIETY ABOUT THE RIGHT CAMERA IS SOMETHING THAT HAS BEEN INSTILLED INTO YOU, DRUMMED INTO YOU, BY THE CAMERA MAGAZINES AND BY THINGS LIKE, I'M SORRY TO SAY, THIS WEB SITE AND ITS FORUM. THE POINT OF POP PHOTO AND SO ON IS TO PUBLISH ALL THOSE ARTICLES ABOUT CAMERAS LENSES LIGHT METERS ETC SO AS TO MAKE ITS READERS 1) THINK THE ANSWER IS IN A PIECE OF EQUIPMENT: "IF I ONLY HAD THE CANON THIS, THE YASCHICA THAT, THE SONY THE OTHER THING..." SO THAT THEY'LL LOOK AT THE ADS AND SAY 2) MAYBE I'LL BUY THIS...AND THEY DO THIS SO THAT THEY GET ADVERTISING FROM THE BIG CAMERA COMPANIES. IF YOU LOOK CAREFULLY AT THE MAGAZINES YOU WILL SEE THAT THEY HARDLY EVER SAY ANYTHING NEGATIVE ABOUT A NEW PIECE OF EQUIPMENT--NOT SO NEGATIVE AS TO BE DAMAGING, THAT IS. IF THEY DO, SONY OR KONICA OR WHATEVER WILL PULL THE ADS FROM THEM. SEE A 1879 OR 1980 OR 1981 INTERVIEW WITH THE EX-POP-PHOTOGRAPHY, EX-MODERN PHOTOGRAPHY, EX-US CAMERA WRITER SIMON NATHAN, FIRED FROM OR who left all those magazines and more because he wanted to write the truth about the new Nikon this and the new Leica that etc. and his editors wouldn't let him, so he founded his own newsletter, SIMON SAYS. It was pretty popular in the late 1970s early 1980s. The interview is in a national trade magazine, "Professional Photographer," published in Des Plaines, Ill. It's pretty interesting, a voice from the inside of the camera magazines. IN OTHER WORDS, YOU CAN'T TRUST A SINGLE ARTICLE ABOUT A SINGLE PIECE OF EQUIPMENT IN A SINGLE CAMERA MAGAZINE.L Those articles are there to make you anxious--DO I HAVE THE RIGHT EQUIPMENT???!!!--and to keep you buying more. CAMERA COMPANIES DON'T CARE SO MUCH ABOUT NEGATAIVE REVIEWS ON THESE FORUMS BECAUSE, HEY!! LET'S FACE IT!!! NOT EVERYBODY WILL SEE ALL THE REVIEWS, AND, LET'S ALSO FACE IT, EVERYONE WRITING HERE IS AN AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER, A NEGATAIVE REVIEW ON DPreview doesn't carry the authority of a negative review in Popular Photography...And as long as y'all are talking to each other about the new gizmo you're usuing the company name and...

The key isn't in the camera. In the 1980s very, very good photographs were made by good photographers all over the world, using a $5 Japanese plastic camera (leaked light so much the photographers had to tape it up with black tape every time they changed film)...Called the Diana Camera. Got written up in the New Yorker, long article by one of their staff writerrs, and everything...Lots of Diana camera pictures still being made, exhibited, collected....Published in American Photographer and so on as examples of good photography....I mean, $5 for the camera, imagine how much the lens cost, a cheap plastic doodad, awful thing, but...

It's how the photographer sees, and handles that camera, that instrument, the one he has...


A competent photographer can take pictures with a normal lens and have them come out looking as though they were taken with a telephoto, or a wide angle lens, depending on how he holds, etc. the camera

A very successful commercial photographer I knew in NY, specialized in table top still lifes, you know, the whisky glass with the beautiful amber liquid in it on those beautifully transparent ice cubes with the beautiful bottle next to it, all back lit, against a beautiful bluish gray plain background....And all that hig h tech high detailed stuff, perfume bottles, lipstick, food, etc...

Now you'd think he made those pictures in a studio, lots of light, big camera (8x10 maybe), special stuff all over the place, lots of backdrops on wheels, rreflectors, etc...right?

Nah., He made them in his livingroom, with a Leica, 50 mm lens, ONE LIGHT and some cheap backdrop paper he'd pin up in the living room wall. How could he do this? He knew what a camera can do, and how to do it, knew what light was, and how to make that one light do everything a big studio lighting set does.

THE EQUIPMENT IS ALMOST NEVER THE REASON YOUR PICTURES DON'T SATISFY YOU AND BUYING A NEW PIECE OF EQUIPMENT IS ALMOST NEVER GOING TO MAKE YOUR PICTURES SATISFY YOU. THE THING TO DO IS TO LEARN ABOUT PICTURES AND ABOUT CAMERAS, HOW TO USE THE LATTER TO MAKE THE FORMER. YOUR ANXIETY ABOUT EQUIPMENT IS SOMETHING THAT'S BEEN CREATED IN YOU BY A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO WANT TO TAKE MONEY OUT OF YOUR POCKET AND WHO DON'T WANT TO HAVE TO WORK VERY HARD IN ORDER TO DO IT, AND WANT TO, AND DO, DO IT BY REMOTE...AFTER ALL, THE TECHNIQUES OF ADVERTISING ARE EASY TO TEACH AND LEARN...THEY'RE BEING TAUGHT AND LEARNED EVERY DAY ALL OVER THE WORLD IN COMMUNITY COLLEGES, 4 YEAR COLLEGES AND GRADUATE SCHOOLS, SO KONIKA AND NICON AND CANNON, THEY DON'T EVEN HAVE TO THINK ABOUT HOW TO ADVERTISE, THEY JUST HIRE PEOPLE TO DO THIS WORK FOR THEM...IT'S EASY TO MAKE YOU ANXIOUS ABOUT YOUR EQUIPMENT...THEY PAY SO CALLED "WRITERS" TO DO IT, AND THESE "WRITERS"--WORKING FOR POP PHOTO ETC--DO IT JUST FINE...THE TECHNIQUES ARE SIMPLE:l NEVER COME TO A REAL CONCLUSION, AND ALWAYS IMPLY THAT you aren't making the pictures you want AND LEAVE IT OPEN AT THE END. maybe this piece of equipment will...AND IF IT'S OPEN, INCONCLUSIVE, THEN YOUR ANXIETY IS EXCITED BUT NEVER PUT TO REST...AND THESE SO-CALLED ":WRITERS' do canon's and nikon's and sony's dirty work for them...So it's easy to sell cameras...

As people at Sony, CAnnon, Nikon, etc. to TEACH YOU HOW TO MAKE YOUR ICTURES BETTERS. AS THE WRITERS AT POP PHOTO ETC REALLY TO TEACH YOU HOW. None of them can do it.l They can only tell you BUY THIS PRODUCT AND YOUR'E GOING TO BE GOOD. It's like Alice in Wonderland, only when she did EAT ME or DRINK ME she really did get small or larger...Those cameras aren't the magic cake or potion although b oth the camera companies and the so called writers who write for them pretend to you that they are. YOU'VE BEEN MANIPULATED into spending your money for their sake not your own, throwing good money after bad, you can keep on buying the next new the next super the next fancy the next attachment the next improvement the next WOW! BREAKTHROUGH! and so on and never make a good picture.

This is all true.

Versailles Peace Conference, Paris, 1918, 1919 Photojournalist Erich Salamon, denied access to many meetings and conferences, not alwwowed to bring his cameras into the restaurants and hotel lobbies where the diplomats met and did a lot of their negotiation...Salomon put an Erminox into his breifcase, made an unobtrusive hold in the side, ran a cable release through another hole to a place where he could press it from another side, got tux and everything and walked around as though he were one of the people he wanted to photograph. He'd hold the briefcase up to his chest...Etc. EVERY TIME HE DID THIS HE'D HAVE TO GO TO THE MEN'S ROOM OR SOME OTHER PRIVATE PLACE, OPEN THE BRIEFCASE AND ADVANCE THE FILM OR CHANGE THE LITTLE GLASS PLATE, I FORGET WHICH]. In other words, he didn't get a lot of photographs per day for nhis paper. So he had to learn to make each exposure count. Know where to stand, know about his light, know what he'd set his f stop and shutter speed at, know he couldn't photograph in this light, or from here, would have to move and make a different picture or he'd ruin the film...etc. THAT'S THE KIND OF SITUATION IN WHICH ONE ASKS "WHAT KIND OF CAMERA DO I NEED? IS THIS LENS FAST ENOUGH/ IS IT SHARP ENOUGH AT f/4 TO GIVE ME AT LEAST 2 FEET DEPTH OF FIELD FROM 8 FEET AWAY. IT'S ONLY IN SITUATIONS LIKE THIS THAT ONE MUST CHECK THE SPECS OF CAMERAS, LENSES, ETC...,

Think about it. Hold on to your money. Learn how to photograph.

yrs,

Friday, July 16, 2010

Bruce Guilden good or bad?

I think its good. I like it.

There is no truth in his photography that is its not going to be used for evidence on court and all that...
He creates a reality of his own.



Personal experience:
Its difficult to do what he does especially if you are alone.
Try using a flash at night see how many nosey parkers you invite and adds their little bit of thought/threat in what you should or should not photograph.
I'm not saying I'm am right. I am taking pictures in the grey area especially in singapore where public is not used to it.

Well I kill my child yesterday when i was pressured into deleting my picture.
On the otherhand this seems to be good ground for practice if i ever want to be a war photographer.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Why work with Flash

All is sharp all is clear this is darn important if you have many human figures in the frame.

Fill flash issue due to Sync speed..
As some have commented use ND filter but I have not used it yet. Might try.

Being Strobed by a DSLR VS a cute/ cool / etc Leica might not have as much backlash? plus a sheepish grin, i think i can get away with a lot.

For non pro work get the sf 24D should be fine plus a sync cord.
SF 58 is really over kill.

Leica Myth : Leica users don't use Flash

False I use flash, Winogrand used a lot of it for public relations, infamous bruce guilden, Diane Arbus as well.


Wednesday, July 7, 2010

April 2010


L1000317, originally uploaded by bene123.

April 2010


L1001628, originally uploaded by bene123.

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Pictures by me made in april 2010






Number 1

Personal View:
I make pictures. Thats it.

I have sent out email to invite RF (Rangefinder) photographers to guest write about their love of photography.
Anyone who wish to add please Email to me @ benedictchen22@gmail.com