2.04.2023

Leica SL and Leica Vario-Elmar 35-70mm f4.0 go for a walk in the sunshine. This is part two of today's image collection. The words snappy, saturated and sharp come to mind.

 


The storm we just lived through is destined to take too much of my time in remediation and too much of my budget for tree services. We have some big branches that have snapped but not fallen and one big one is hanging right over my neighbor's driveway. I'd try to wrangle it but it's probably multiple hundreds of pounds of dead (or deadly) weight and it's about forty feet up in the air. I do know my limitations and that kind of daredevil tree trimming it outside my wheelhouse. The real issue is not so much the money but just being able to get a tree service in the near future. Nearly every home owner and business owner who has trees on their property is lining up to try to schedule. 

So, after getting a reasonable estimate for one service (that doesn't climb trees) to come and pick up the monstrous piles of dead branches I've pulled together in the side yard I took a breather and went out with that lens I've been talking about for the last few days. It's the Leica Vario-Elmar 35-70mm f4.0 and it's supposed to be pretty darn cool. I thought I'd take it for a spin on the front of a Leica SL camera body and see how the whole rig handles.

Here are my sample from an hour long walk through my urban "office." The camera is wonderful. And the lens gives me just the right set of features for good street photography; including being able (mostly at 35mm) to set an aperture and a distance and do grab shots without stopping to focus. Or at least not very often. 

So far I am impressed. Not much wrong here. I used a Novoflex R to L adapter, shot at my "Erwin Puts" mandated faster shutter speed of 1/250th and higher. Tried to stay close to f5.6 which is purported to be the optimum aperture and let Auto-ISO guide me through the exposure triangle. It's a great way to work. Fast and sure. And the "punch-in-ability" of the SL is perfect for fine focusing manual focus lenses with great accuracy. I love the focal length range and I especially appreciate the lens being less than half the weight of the Leica 24-90mm f2.8-4.0 lens. Zooms can be quite cool. A small kit with this lens as the primary, all day long tool, supplemented by something like the Zeiss 50mm f1.4 for evening, interior and night shooting. Not exactly a kit for professional work but certainly for a resourceful amateur or a true lover of photography.

Here are my favorite images from the outdoor shooting today. Shot raw and lightly processed in Lightroom. :

I saw them together and loved their look. I asked them to pose for me and 
they patiently waited while I manually focused and then, true to my professional training, proceeded to shoot a bunch of frames. I liked this one the best. I hope they do as well..
No lights. Just open shade.

A quick grab shot using hyperfocal distance coupled with a pleasant, non-threatening smile.

Same. Love the red. Wow! 

Everyone was enjoying the sunshine. Cabin fever was pandemic in Austin last week. 



Layer upon layer. Shot at 70mm with f5.6. 


Here's what the camera package looks like. I got a ripped professional model to hold the camera for me and pose. Looks almost authentic... right? which watch is that?









She's back.... but only so you can compare "oranges to oranges" with my photos of her 
from a range of other cameras. I'm worried about her thumb though. I hope she doesn't 
mess it up any worse. I'd hate to have to bring her to my dermatologist's office and 
sit with her in the waiting room. Jeez. I hope she has insurance.













That just about does it for a quick test in good light. 
Jury is currently on hiatus. should I buy it?

Let's see what this tree devastation correction is going to cost me first.
Austin prices....detached from reality. 

12 comments:

EdPledger said...

Impressive. No flies on that combo. Sharp to edges and excellent colors. Will prod me into trying a couple older zooms on the S5….not Leica tho…wheres the crying face emoji?

TMJ said...

You should buy it. I have just read the reviews/comments by Erwin Puts about the two 35-70mm R lenses in his 'Leica Lens Compendium'. Very favourable for both.

Although Puts said 1/125, it was Tony Ray-Jones who famously entered the note into his diary, saying to avoid camera shake use 1/250th, or, higher. I saw the actual diary entry at an exhibition some years ago.

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

Richard says: "The Erwin Puts.Compendium is available at https://archive.org/ "

Michael Matthews said...

This lens makes you happy. Buy it, tree removal costs permitting. Oh, hell, who are we kidding? Just buy it.

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

Ah. MM, you know me too well...

Tree services come out of a totally different account from the "lens acquisition" account.

Thanks!

Jon Maxim said...

I was not able to find the Erwin Puts Compendium at the site Richard mentioned - probably due to my inability to navigate it properly. However I did find it at

https://collectiblend.com/Library/Leica_Lens_Compendium_Content.php

It is in typical web page HTML format which you have to read online. If you want to save it, I recommend that you create a PDF using Adobe Acrobat (full version not Reader) or another PDF creating program. If you are using Acrobat go to 'File>Create>PDF from Web Page' and make sure that you that enable 'Capture Multiple Levels>Get Entire Site'. Note: It may look a bit different in the menu of your version of Acrobat if it is a different version than my ancient Acrobat XI.

Richard said...

To expand, I found the Compendiom at:

https://archive.org/details/LeicaLensCompendiumE.Puts2005D.D.TeoliJr.A.C.

I was signed in which may make a difference.

Richard said...

I should have added that it’s downloable!

Kirk, Photographer/Writer said...

Thanks very much Richard. It's a great resource even for photographers who have no interest in Leica products. And even more so for Leica nuts...

Pete F said...

You’re giving me GAS. I am now obsessed with finding a used SL.

adam said...

some great shots there, I've been working on my "tilt the camera till the sky isn't clipped then use the autoexposure lock" technique lately, I've tended to overdo it and end up with completely dark foregrounds, trying to end up with a more balanced jpeg which has started working better

pixtorial said...

I've never been big on the Leica "gestalt", but damn, some of these photos really pop. Similar to a lot of your Sigma fp images, they just have a "something" about them. Especially love the lovely couple you photographed and the "layer upon layer" photo. Both really show off the camera/lens combo (as well as your prodigious skills of course).