Monday, October 20, 2025

We're past the middle of October. Things are proceeding as planned.

Things are mellow around here. I'm catching up on lunches with friends and dinners with family. Cameras and lenses come and go. In a short while my son will be 30 years old and a few days later I'll be 70 years old. Still can't believe it. I know I should complain about something physical but with the exception of a dermatologist who never met a small growth on my skin that she didn't want to biopsy I still feel like a kid. No aches or pains. No limping around. Haven't lost my car keys yet. Still know how to set up a custom website. Not yet lonely and isolated. If anything the recession/abandonment of commercial work has caused a surge in socializing. Swimmers, electrical engineers, curators, fellow photographers, writers and family all seem to want to get together for coffees, lunches and dinners. If anything I'm having to be strict with them about carving out time for myself. 

My friend Paul keeps presenting me with photo gear deals that are too good to pass up. Currently considering a Leica 35-70mm f4.0 R lens that was a stellar performer back in the film days. Still is. Last month he let go of a Voigtlander 35mm f2.0 APO for the M mount that I just had to add to the collection... Who knows what will crop up next month?

Last week I deposited the last outstanding check from a client. It was for the last official job. It was odd to experience; like the passing of an era. Next month I'll get my first Social Security payment. Free money. Can't wait. 

I wrote earlier about hitting the wall when it came to the motivation to photograph. I pushed myself out the door every day since then and am happy to report that finding good photos is still exciting, fun and fulfilling. Sometimes thrilling.  But the desire for more cameras seems to be receding day by day. It's either because there's nothing new and exciting out there or it's because I have too many wonderful cameras to play with already. Currently cycling between the CLs and the SLs. 

My latest foray was with two Leica SL2 cameras. One fitted with the VM 50mm APO and the other fitted with the VM 35mm APO. Both lenses are made for the M series cameras but I sourced Leica's M to L adapters for both. I grew tired of trying out third party adapters only to have them fall short in one way or another. And I wanted to carry two cameras so I wouldn't have to stop and change lenses or deal with dust on sensors as a result of changing lenses in a dry and windy environment. The two cameras brought back memories of film day shoots where we might use three cameras with three different prime lenses on them. Back then it was both the reticence to change lenses all the time but also it improved the odds that the cameras would still have un-shot film in them if things came up quickly. 

The SL2 is one of the best cameras I've bought (back in 2019). The sensor has very high resolution, the body is solid and highly weather resistant and the thinner filters on the camera's sensor make using wide angle M series lenses more practical. Providing better results. While it's not the best high ISO performer I find well exposed files are very good to 3200 ISO and very useable up to 6400 ISO. Add in IBIS for the M lenses and it adds up to a really nice package for someone who might vacillates between mirrorless Leicas and M series rangefinder Leicas. And right now you can pick up used bodies for roughly a third (or less) of the original retail purchase print. About $2200 for a body in pretty good cosmetic condition...

Short term plans are to celebrate the two birthdays (Ben's and mine). See if any one of my family or colleagues took my gift "wish list" seriously (M11P - $10K  --- hope they are not that crazy!!) and to eat really, really good chocolate cake. On Saturday the 25th, right between birthdays, I'll head down to Austin's ever interesting downtown to make photographs at the Day of the Dead festivities as I have done for the past four years. Thinking that this time I'll limit myself to an SL2 and that 75mm TTArtisan AF lens I picked up last month. That lens has been a very good performer. A good match up.

In the middle of November I'll go forward with my zany plan to spend another week in Montreal. Not a family vacation but a chance to walk around for five or six days and make photographs at random. Once I have the dates nailed down I'll send along a note to my friends and acquaintances in Montreal and see if anyone is interested in meeting for coffee. I promise, not at Tim Horton's. 

Before the Montreal trip B. and I will have our usual fun evening passing Halloween candy out to the kids in the neighborhood. If the weather works out we'll do what we've done for the last couple of years and that's to set up a table at the top of our driveway and hang out there so the little kids don't have to make it all the way down the driveway to score candy. It also gives us a chance to catch up with the parents who bring them along. We'll keep something fun to drink at the table so the adults can get a treat as well.... We've had a fun time with neighbors on Halloween in past years and, amazingly, 99% of them are great people. 

Still waiting patiently for the big announcements from Leica. The one about the new 11 EV (an M 11 with an EVF instead of a rangefinder window) and the long awaited Q3 Monochrom. I'm also wondering if there are going to be any new lens announcements. Maybe some more stuff for the SL system? A 28mm f2.8 Elmarit would be a nice addition... Something that doesn't dwarf the camera bodies. 

Texas continues to be a weird and interesting place to live. Austin buffers the worst parts. Hope everyone is happy and well. 

 

Got to six swim workouts in a row last week. Thank goodness for a great pool and a great program. Trying to six again this week. Can't see any big obstacles. Those miles don't swim themselves....

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Urban Landscapes on a Sunday Afternoon. Austin. Q2. Shot as black and whites in the camera. Jpeg all the way!!

 















Swam.

Read a novel. 

Walked through downtown.

Did the paperwork for state sales tax.

Put images in a blog.

Family dinner just ahead.

Having fun looking through images taken with different cameras and different sensor formats. All are fun.

Sony one inch sensor.

Samsung APS-C sensor.

Film. The original "full frame sensor".

Sony. Digital full frame sensor.

And then all the images from Iceland, below, were done with a camera
that has a micro four thirds sensor.

Pretty much the difference on the web is in the content not the 
technical parameters of the tools...


Geothermal steam cloud.





The presidential residence, behind the church in the foreground. 


Outlying ice near a glacier.

Lighthouse.


Most cameras are good enough for most things. Knowing how to gauge exposure is helpful. Knowing how you like to compose is critical to your own appreciation of your images. The practice of photography done for personal enjoyment is supposed to be fun, fulfilling and reward curiosity.

That's the only message for today.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

Still putting the digital Leica CL and the Sigma Contemporary 56mm f1.4 lens through their paces. Getting comfortable again with a "cropped" frame.

 

Photographed at Allen's Boots, I wanted to see once more how the 
Sigma 56mm handled shooting wide open and whether or not a fast 
shutter speed combined with auto ISO would be a decent alternative
to built in image stabilization. Seems to work fine. 

I'd forgotten just how nice the colors and the tonalities in the Jpeg and raw files of the Leica CL could be. And I found myself loving the ability to shoot with the electronic shutter at speeds up to 1/25,000th of a second. It's like having a non-fiddly, built-in, always clean, neutral density filter at my disposal. 

The camera has a 24 megapixel sensor and does a decent job at handling high ISO noise. Even better now that Lightroom Classic has a "next gen" A.I. flavored DeNoise feature. It only works on the raw files but I can routinely shoot a couple more stops worth of high ISO without seeing much in the way of artifacts or weirdness in smooth areas. The one fault I was reminded of yesterday was the short battery life, but it's offset by the fact that the battery isn't exclusive to the CL but is widely used by Panasonic and Sigma so there are many options for far less pricey batteries than those available from Leica. You can go really cheap and source batteries from Watson and Wasabi Power but I kinda draw the line at the top tier camera makers' products. About $40 a battery. My solution to the less than optimal battery endurance is to just stick a couple of extras in my pocket, camera bag or back pack. Bonus! The same battery is also used in one of my other favorite cameras; the Sigma fp (where the battery life is no better).

Re: Appearances. Several people noticed my camera and asked me if it was a vintage film camera. Its resemblance to just post WW2 Leica screw mount rangefinder cameras is pretty obvious.
Can you get shallow depth of field with a 56mm lens?
I'd say yes. 
After an exhausting 30 minutes of casual snapshot photography I decided it was time to take a short break and rest my weary bones. Or, I just walked by Jo's Coffee and saw these really delicious looking apple tarts. Had to have one. Had to have coffee to wash it down with. And to paraphrase Hemmingway: "And it was good." 
A deep dive into previous century lit at Jo's.
And, of course, the mannequins were out in full force. Animated by Formula One, The "No Kings" march in downtown and also "game day" at UT Austin. They all seemed sparkier than usual.
Which gets us all the way over to the Hermés store.
The windows are restrained and almost generic but I may be missing something.
The oscilloscope was actually working and showing sine waves so that
much was legit...

After several days of revisiting the CL I have to say that it's nice to have such a compact but powerful camera to tote around when I'm more interested in the whole idea of a good walk and not just focused on a particular photography project. The variety of APS-C Sigma lenses for L mount is an added bonus for me. Next time out I think I'll lean on the 30mm f1.4. It's a nice 45mm full frame equivalent.

Swim practice was good this morning. Lots of yardage. Not too crowded.
Nicely crafted sets on the white board. Good lane mates. Although that spot 
where the dermatologist biopsied Thursday stung a bit when I first dived in...

Now chilling out and waiting on a delivery from The Leica Store Miami.
Nothing big. Just a used M to L lens adapter. I wanted one for both of
the SL2 bodies so I could put an APO 35mm VM on one and the APO 50mm VM on the second one. 
Tired of changing lenses in the streets and then having to deal with sensor dust. 

Always an experiment. Sometimes it works and sometimes not...