Shel Belinkoff wrote:
> >A very interesting comment, Mark, and one I don't understand.
> >First, how can you prep a shot with one camera and then make a
> >second "keeper" with anything but a static subject. IOW, if you're
> >shooting a living, breathing entity, the second shot will not be the
>
Yes, and the same alien intervention that keeps making money disappear from my
bank account only to reappear in Pentax's. Damned aliens!
BTW: I'm off to visit my parents in Georgia this weekend and plan on giving the
MZ-S a thorough workout. Full report later.
"Bill Owens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr
At 06:31 AM 9/25/01 -0700, Shel wrote:
>Ahh ... I see the word "learn" in Mark's post, which makes your point,
>although I do believe Mark is a pretty good photographer, so I
>overlooked his need to learn.
We all need to keep learning, Shel :-)
- MCC
- - - - - - - - - -
Mark Cassino
Kalamazoo,
At 08:15 AM 9/25/01 -0500, Maris wrote:
>Good point, Shel. Plus the digital camera and 35mm will each operate
>uniquely and identical settings may not result in identical images anyway,
>and using appropriate differing settings puts you back to square one -
>taking the 35mm image alone.
This i
Must be that same alien intervention that caused the streaks on my recent
roll of Delta 400
Bill, KG4LOV
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> This has nothing really to do with this thread, but everything to do
> with being surprised. Some time ago I developed a roll of Tri-X, and
> was astounded to find the f
Christian Skofteland writes:
> John Shaw says the he often uses a view camera to shoot landscapes because
> it forces him to slow down and carefully compose before tripping the
> shutter.
I find the same thing using a 6x7. I've noticed that it is just not practical in
some situations, like wh
At 05:23 AM 9/25/01 -0700, you wrote:
>Mark Cassino wrote:
>
> > Right on that. Traditional photography is
> > like trying to learn the piano without hearing
> > what you play. It would be like paying a piece,
> > sending in a tape, and a day or so later finally
> > hearing it. I also set and p
> -Original Message-
> From: Mick Maguire [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> My two cents worth: In a recent edition of Outdoor
> Photographer there was a
> pro landscape photographer (sorry I don't remember his name)
> who used a
> digital camera to compose / try shots before getting all
gt; Subject: Re: Digicams and 35mm--Warning! Long post
>
>
> Shel scribbled.
>
> > Wasn't it Bethoven who composed while deaf - although I suppose
> > he was a special example.
>
> Yes, but he wasn't totally deaf his entire career. FWIW, he
> was total
Mick ...
I think we all agree that for static subjects the idea works well.
But the real question (for me) is how Mark uses a digital camera to
prep a shot of something that's dynamic, and which may move or
disappear in a fraction of a second. Perhaps he doesn't ... I don't
know, and only Mark
True - the CCD is probably collecting more data per square millimeter than
I am giveing it credit for. Possibly more than film, though I don;t really
have a point o0f reference for that.
But, the bottom line is a 3.3 megapixel image is still limited in how big
it can be printed.
To put this
On 22 Sep 2001, at 10:24, Mike Johnston wrote:
>
> I read some fascinating comments recently written by a guy who signs
> himself Peter iNova--I don't know his real name. He pointed out that
> the resolution cutoff for digital is relatively severe--because, in
> his words (paraphrasing), "You ca
AIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2001 8:24 AM
Subject: Re: Digicams and 35mm--Warning! Long post
> Mark C. wrote:
>
> > I'm totally with you on this, Mike. I bought a 3 mp digital about a
month
> > ago, and just relish the freed
Another interesting aspect of digital shooting is that you can "choose" the
"length" of your "roll of film." I can buy a 32, 64, or 128MB SmartMedia
card for my camera, for instance. Shooting at the maximum pixel count in
Super-High-Quality (lowest level of JPEG compression), you get 27 shots on a
Mark C. wrote:
> I'm totally with you on this, Mike. I bought a 3 mp digital about a month
> ago, and just relish the freedom to walk around and shoot whatever. You
> can shoot hundreds of pics in a day, get the results instantly, see what
> works and what doesn't. The instant feedback and abi
At 09:42 AM 9/19/01 -0500, Mike wrote:
>Personally I'm extremely surprised by my own reaction to trying digital. I
>have been so loyal to my established method (dirt-simple: manual-focus 35mm
>camera, 35 to 50mm lenses, Tri-X, D-76, carefully crafted 6x9 or 7x10.5
>full-frame prints) for so long,
Mike wrote,
http://www.pdml.net and follow the directions. Don't forget to
visit the Pentax Users' Gallery at http://pug.komkon.org .
Pål wrote:
> This is one of the main points; is there any reason to stick to the 35mm
> format for digital? Is the 35mm system and its lenses the best or even a good
> platform for digital? I'm not at all convinced.
I'm not either...to me, the smaller CCD size is one of the principle
advantages
Kevin Butler wrote:
> Apart from changing the colour balance of picture before I
> print it to look yellow/green, are there other settings I should be
> looking at to make for more accurate colour matching? (BTW, the monitor
> is set to a colour temperature of 6700K.)
Have you run Adobe Gamma or
Mike wrote:
> I have a decent-quality $650 3-mp p/s that's pretty limited--it simply has
> to be prefocused to be at all responsive, for instance. You have to achieve
> the "green dot" first or the camera is so slow as to be useless. But because
> of the extremely small size of the CCD and the ex
Paul S. wrote:
> I enjoy darkroom work, but I've also become a
> huge fan of the digital darkroom. I don't start with digital exposures.
> I start with hi-res (60 Meg) scans of color transparencies. But I love
> working on them in PhotoShop and printing them on my Epson 1200 inkjet.
> The results
Mike Johnston wrote:
Shakespeare probably got the historical reference from
> Holland's translation of Suetonius.
Or quite possibly from Plutarch's Lives, which was the historical source
of many Shakespearean plots. Plutarch wrote, "Some say, he (Caesar)
opposed the rest , and continued struggli
Anand wrote:
> what is "Et tu" ?
It means "You too?" (literally, "and you") in Latin. According to
Shakespeare it was what Julius Caesar said to Brutus after Brutus had
mortally stabbed him. Shakespeare probably got the historical reference from
Holland's translation of Suetonius.
--Mike
-
This
TECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 19, 2001 7:51 PM
Subject: Re: Digicams and 35mm--Warning! Long post
| what is "Et tu" ?
|
|
| >From: "Robert Wetmore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
| >Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| >Subject: Re: Digica
Mike Johnston wrote:
> Do I love S800 color prints MORE? No way.
>
> But I like them a lot. And I'm having a lot of fun learning how to do them.
> That's probably the key word to my whole experience of digital: FUN. It's
> just an enormous kick. Truly a blast. I'm really, really enjoying myself.
what is "Et tu" ?
>From: "Robert Wetmore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: Digicams and 35mm--Warning! Long post
>Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 14:41:39 -0400
>
>Mike wrote:
>
>"Perso
From: Mike Johnston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> But I like them a lot. And I'm having a lot of fun learning how to do
them.
> That's probably the key word to my whole experience of digital: FUN. It's
> just an enormous kick. Truly a blast. I'm really, really enjoying myself.
Well there it is Mike! Tha
Mike Johnston wrote:
> I would imagine that now we're going to get into a theoretical argument
> about resolution, based on numbers. I've never cared for--or given much
> credence to--any of that kind of nonsense. I look at pictures. If it looks
> good, it is good. If it looks like crap, I don't
Alin wrote:
>Sorry Mike, to me narrow dof is a big loss. And please don't tell me
>you can fix that in Photoshop.
Alin,
I'm not trying to talk you out of your own methods. Honest. We all use what
we need and choose. All I can talk about are my own experiences, and that's
all I'm doing. I would
Hi Tom ... yes, I was talking about print quality, not the subject or
composition of his photos. And yes, you're probably correct in
assuming that Mike knows a bit about what makes a quality print,
however, we all have different standards and preferences. I've spent
some time with a photographer
Shel Belinkoff wrote:
>
> > The interesting aspect of Mike's post
> > is that he's an avowed and
> > accomplished darkroom freak who really
> > seems to like the output he gets
> > from a middle of the road digital camera.
>
> Since I've never seen Mike's prints, and don't know what he considers
Robert Wetmore wrote:
> And have you ever driven a Ford F-150?
> These things corner like a dream!
Have you ever driven an Aston Martin? Those things can't carry 4x8
sheets of plywood worth a shit!
--
Shel Belinkoff
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List
tom wrote:
> soon you'll be able to mount all
> your Pentax lenses on an MZ-D.
> You'll be able to manually focus and
> expose to your heart's content.
When I see it, I'll believe it. I know that there are those who swear
it's coming, and I hope it does, and that it's a well-designed
camera.
Mike wrote:
"Personally I'm extremely surprised by my own reaction to trying
digital." [A long description of the wonders of digital snipped to avoid
offending the guy who hates inclusion of long excerpts in reponses.]
Have you tried McDonald's food? I think you'll find it really exquisite.
Shel Belinkoff wrote:
>
>
> So, how do you get a more selective DOF? What if you want just a
> small area in focus and lots of out of focus area in front of or
> behind the subject? Can you set the focus between two subjects, where
and Alin said:
> Bokeh? What bokeh can you possibly get at
Mike Johnston wrote:
> Personally I'm extremely surprised by my own reaction to trying digital.
Yes, you seem like a kid let loose in a candy store with a gold card
> What has caught me completely by surprise is that I find I love it. I love
> PICTURES--I love exploring the look of the world
Mike wrote:
MJ> lens, wonderful things become possible. First of all, depth of field is so
MJ> great that at moderate apertures (I mean like f/2.8 or f/4) and ordinary
MJ> camera-to-subject distances, pan-focus (i.e., everything in focus front to
Sorry Mike, to me narrow dof is a big loss. And
Mike Johnston wrote:
>
> I have a decent-quality $650 3-mp p/s that's pretty limited--it simply has
> to be prefocused to be at all responsive, for instance. You have to achieve
> the "green dot" first or the camera is so slow as to be useless.
So what's next on your shopping list?
> When you
38 matches
Mail list logo