Showing posts with label Tele-Elmarit 90mm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tele-Elmarit 90mm. Show all posts

Nov 23, 2012

Film Cameras For Lovers - Leica M5 (Photo Gear 16)

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The Leica M5 remains, after all these years, a controversial Leica.
Opinions about this camera tend to passionately diverge between love and hate.
Some people enjoy it precisely for the same reasons others despise it: a different shape and larger size than previous M’s, its vertical hanging from the two carrying-strap lugs at the left end of the body – later remedied with an optional third lug for horizontal transport −, rapid rewind-crank on the camera baseplate, are some of the grounds for the enthusiastic quarrel among the Leica rangefinder cognoscenti.
Paradoxically, quite a few of these changes in the characteristic shape of a Leica M are the direct consequence of some of the best and most innovative M5 attributes: through-the-lens spot metering (Cds cell), shutter speed and exposure information on viewfinder, are only some arguments impressive enough to treasure the Leica M5, which undeniably deserves a special status in the long Leitz/Leica tradition of manufacturing first-class tools for the discerning photographer.
 

 

 

 
Summicron 2/35mm
 

 

 

 
Tele-Elmarit 2.8/90mm
 

 

 
Elmarit 2.8/135mm
 
 
 
Four decades later, this groundbreaking camera is still capable of producing first-rate photographs on film.
No matter what criticism it may arise − or praise, for that matter −, in my opinion the Leica M5 is the last true classic camera from Leitz Wetzlar, a beautifully made apparatus and a great performer on competent hands.
I will make a small transcription from a book that I bought many years ago:
 
The Leica M5, introduced in 1971, is still what Leicas have been since 1932 – a rangefinder camera that combines the highest optical and mechanical standards with the greatest ease of handling. It is the first rangefinder camera to combine interchangelenses with a through-the-lens metering system.
The M5 has a rugged die-cast chassis like those of earlier M Leicas, redesigned and slightly enlarged to accommodate the metering system. It remains a compact and handy camera that can use most of the earlier M-Leica lenses and accessories”.
Leica Manual – 15th Edition (The Complete Book of 35mm Photography)
© Morgan & Morgan, Inc., N.Y., 1973.
 
I couldn’t say it better.
 
Long live the Leica M5!
 


 
Toquinho, Serpa, June 2009
(Toquinho is a wonderful guitar player who made countless memorable records with Vinicius de Moraes - Thank you for the invitation Fred and Ana!)
 
 

 
Crossing the river Sado from Setúbal to Tróia, March 2009
 
 

 
My best friend "Pakica", Évora, March 2009
 
 
(Photographs made with the Leica M5)
 
 
 
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Jul 9, 2012

Lisbon - City of Light, City of Pain (2012)

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Shot with Leica M3 or M4 cameras.
Kodak T-Max 400 developed in Kodak D-76 1+1.
Lisbon, Portugal, in the year 2012.



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Apr 17, 2012

Lyon, France - August 2008 (Leica M3)

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After my last post about the Leica M3, I thought that it would be appropriate to show some more photographs made with this fine photographic tool.
On a hot summer day, we were travelling by car from Germany to Portugal. Not wanting to fall asleep at the wheel and needing to stretch our legs, we decided that it was time to take a short break in the French city of Lyon.
Rangefinder cameras can be very good travel companions. They are small and unobtrusive, people usually don’t seem to take them very seriously. That’s why many photographers – obviously myself included - consider them ideal for street photography.
I hope that you enjoy the photographs.









Technical Data:
Camera - Leica M3
Lenses - 28mm Elmarit-M + 50mm Summicron-M + 90mm Tele-Elmarit-M
Film - Kodak Tri-X
Developer - Kodak D-76 1+1
Location - August, 2008
Scanner - Epson 4990 Photo

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Jan 19, 2012

Porto Brandão, Portugal - August 2011

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Technical data:
Camera - Leica M4
Lenses - Leitz Summicron 35mm + Tele-Elmarit 90mm
Film - Agfa APX 100
Developer - Kodak D-76, 1+1
Location - Porto Brandão, Portugal
Date - August 2011
Scanner - Epson Perfection 4990 Photo


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Nov 11, 2011

Sofia and Ricardo Got Married - September 10, 2011

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My nephew Ricardo and Sofia got married last September.
I decided to take the chance and use the occasion to make some classical Leica photography: unobtrusive and intimate. The kind of stuff Leicas are good at and got famous for!
In black and white film, of course!





I chose two Leica M bodies (a M3 from 1955, - yes, that’s the year of my birth! and a M4 from 1968/69 respectively, - yes, that’s the year the first men landed on the moon!) and a couple of lenses:
 Super-Angulon 21mm f/3.4  (a really true non-retrofocus classic, designed and built by Schneider and resold by Leitz), Summicron 35mm f/2.0  (the often called “king of Bokeh, whatever people mean by that…), and the very enjoyable and small Tele-Elmarit 90mm f/2.8 (sadly in the meantime vanished from the Leica catalogue, I will forever treasure it!).
As film material, I picked up Agfa APX 100 (another true classic) and the new Kodak T-Max 400 (my concession to modern technology…).
I stuffed it all, together with a Gossen Variosix F lightmeter, in a small Leitz Kombitasche M.
 I was ready to go!


















Wishing this nice couple all the best in the world, a wonderful song as food for thought:
“Congratulations” – Paul Simon


Congratulations
Oh, seems like you’ve done it again
And I ain’t had such misery since
Since I don’t know when,
Oh, and I don’t know when


I notice so many people
Slippin’ away
And many more waiting in the lines
In the courtrooms today
Oh, in the courtrooms today


Love is not a game
Love is not a toy
Love’s no romance
Love will do you in
And love will wash you out
And needless to say
You won’t stand a chance, and you won’t stand a chance.


I’m hungry for learning
Won’t you answer me, please?
Can a man and a woman
Live together in peace?
Oh, live together in peace


(From the album Paul Simon - 1971)

Technical Data:
Cameras - Leica M3 + Leica M4
Lenses - Super Angulon 21mm + Summicron 35mm + Tele Elmarit 90mm
Films - Agfa APX 100 + Kodak T-Max 400
Developer - Kodak D-76, diluted 1+1
Location - Setúbal, Portugal
Date - 10th of September 2011
Scanner - Epson 4990 Photo


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