Friday, February 20, 2026

50mms? What more would one need?

Leica SL 50mm APO Summicron.

Everyone who enjoys photography has a different opinion about lenses. No matter what camera system they currently own. And not everyone can find a "one size fits all" lens to satisfy them. But I'd conjecture that those who don't shoot sports, birds and ambush paparazzi photos fall into the same category as me right now. Based on the demographics I've been able to assess most readers of the VSL blog are within ten years of my age, on either side, have a college degree of some sort and have worked and saved long enough to be somewhat financially secure; if not truly affluent. Some are retired and some are not. But nearly everyone likes to take their camera out on adventures that are more or less wrapped around the desire to make photographs. 

And most could likely be served by one camera and one lens. I hate acronyms but OCOLOY was an acronym made up by Michael Johnston years ago when he posited that a good exercise for a photograper would be to use: One camera and one lens for one year. I'm more flexible than that. I understand that there might be times when it's good or practical to step away from the one, one, one experiment. But at its heart the OCOLOY is a good way to get really, really proficient with a very pared down set of tools. Simplicity sometimes equals transparency in the process. 

As a working commercial photographer, during my career, I never succumbed to the OCOLOY idea. I always felt that I had to have enough focal length variations and choices to handle any of the work projects that clients needed done. We needed very wide angle lenses to show off vast warehouse or factory spaces, macro lenses for product work ---- especially with very small products --- we also needed longer lenses to photograph speakers at podiums in big convention halls. Fast, medium telephoto lenses for traditional portraits and medium-wide lenses (think 35mm and 28mm) for event imaging that required a bit of documentary skill.  Or zooms that provided the same coverage. And reasonable proximity to the participants.

After I passed along my 30+  year position as a theater photographer for a regional theater it dawned on me that the only type of work I had been doing with longer zoom lenses was shooting live stage productions. After a few months I gathered up the long zooms and sold them off. Never looked back and never needed the zany 70-200mm f2.8 lenses for anything else. It was fun to see them go...

The same thing seems to be happening with wide angle lenses in my "work kit." I look at the lenses I've accrued for corporate work with a big mirrorless camera and started separating out the lenses I never really used for any of my personal photography. I started looking seriously at them and wondering when was the last time I pulled X lens out of the drawer to stick on a camera and take out just for fun. Amazingly, the selection was pretty easy. They could nearly all go. Now.

I have two main camera systems. One is built around the Leica M mount cameras and the other (always thought of it as my "commercial" system) is built around the Leica SL cameras. mirrorless. 

In the M mount system raw performance is balanced by portability, reliability and compactness. Great glass and easy to carry around. In that system I have lenses from 21mm to 90mm and those aren't going anywhere. Most are Zeiss or Voigtlander lenses and they work remarkably well when I want to downsize the overall package; and they shrink the total volume and weight when mounted on an SL camera as well. But, as I said just above, that M system, and those lenses, aren't going anywhere. They are too much fun. Especially the two APO lenses from Voigtlander (35+50). Perfect for casual shooting.

But in the "work" system (SL) I've got way too many choices and way too much duplication and overlap. I pulled out a cardboard box and started pulling out the lenses I kept for clients but haven't had fun with in years. There are lots of contemporary wide angles but also a hodgepodge of older legacy 50mm lenses from Nikon, Canon, Zeiss and Voigtlander. A handful of semi-wide to semi-long zoom lenses from a variety of makers and lots and lots of neglected filters and adapters to fit everything. 

Nearly every single prime lens in the collection isn't quite as sharp as the individual focal lengths represented by one Leica 24-90mm SL zoom lens. Why keep them? Size? That's what the M rangefinder lenses are for. 

So, what will I end up with if I really want to downsize the lens collection; in addition to the M mount lenses? Two Leica zoom lenses, one Leica 50mm (the one above), one Leica R 135mm f2.8 ROM lens and.... perhaps... the Sigma 45mm f2.8 for those times when small and light but AF and auto are part of the fun. 

Why the zany APO 50mm f2 SL Summicron? I always thought it would be fun to own the best 50mm lens ever made for consumer cameras --- at least once.  How am I liking it so far? Really great optical performance is as addictive as it gets. It's amazing. Incredibly expensive but amazing. 

The "end of client work" mentality is interesting. For the first couple of months there was a running sub-current of disbelief. A sense that at any minute I'd drop back into the work mode and would need all the stuff I'd pieced together over the years to get stuff done. That an amazing project would surface which might call for some combination of the un-fun, but highly practical, stuff in order to complete. But over time, as I turned down more and more routine work and said "goodbye" to clients, I became more and more resistant to the idea of spending any time which was out of my complete control. And, at a certain point a month or so ago, it was like a switch in my brain clicked and the idea of ever going back to actual, paid work became a non-starter. I'd been spoiled by doing only what I wanted to do... on my schedule. For my own amusement and satisfaction.

At some point I think everyone who cuts the strings with a photographic work/career comes to understand that the fun quotient that drove us into the field was situated in the primeval early days of one's rapturous first embrace of photography. The fun times always seemed to be those first carefree years when one could only afford that entry level SLR and that 50mm lens that came as part of the kit. And amazingly all the things we shot with that primitive kit had more energy and sparkle than anything that mountains of gear eventually provided. Mostly because we had limited choices and never thought to try a throw money at a creative challenge. Because, well, we really couldn't.

At least that's my sense of it. So, for me, the idea of a really cool 50mm, and one really cool camera body as an every day combination pushes me to remember and appreciate how easy it was to make photos I really loved back in the day. When no other choices clouded my intentions. 

It may be just me but distilling down gear seems fun and clarifying. Purging. Freeing. 

Works for lights, light stands, modifiers and lots of other stuff as well....

I understand that many photographers don't love the 50mm focal length as I do. I'm sure it's partially nature and partially nurture ---- as in what you learned on and what you became most comfortable with. You may feel about the 28, 35 or 85mm choices the same way I do about the 50mm but I have a sneaking suspicion that, even if you protest my basic assumption, there's one focal length lens that holds a special place for you and if you didn't have external constraints gnawing at you it's the lens you'd pick nearly all the time. And the one you do your best work with. And that's something fun to learn, even this far into life.













From yesterday's first excursion into mono-lensing.

photographed on South Congress Ave. with a
Leica SL2-S and the 50 APO SL Summicron. 

A nice and ?practical? combination...





 

Thursday, February 19, 2026

New lens arrives and is almost immediately subjected to "mannequin testing."


UPS got here early. I was thrilled. They delivered a nondescript, brown box with no box trauma evident anywhere. Nicely done. Inside the box there were lots of shipping peanuts. And nestled in the warm embrace of the peanuts was another box. And inside that box there was another box (no kidding) and inside that box was all the goodies one has come to expect when unboxing a premium Leica lens. I pulled out a 50mm APO Summicron and immediately attached it the a waiting SL2-S camera - waiting patiently on my desk with a fully charged battery and a (twice checked) memory card. 

The lens is heavy. Incredibly solid feeling. Bereft of any external controls other than the focusing ring. I spent an hour walking around shooting random stuff that I thought might show off the performance of the lens and then, after stopping to buy Girl Scout cookies (thin mint) I rushed home to look at the images and perhaps convince myself that I hadn't spent a king's ransom for nothing. These four images are really two images; a full size and then a very tight crop so we can all see the detail in the fabrics and the appliqués. 

From my point of view the lens is exactly what I was expecting. And hoping for. Both images were shot hand-held and at f2.8. I think the detail is yummy. That's all for right now....




 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Photography provides photographers with so many opportunities to screw up. Just like today...

Mirror, mirror on the wall, reflecting the door on the restroom stall. 

It's a sunny day in Austin. The high today is predicted to be 82° Fahrenheit. T-shirt weather. Birkenstock weather. Rangefinder with 21mm weather! And that was my plan. I grabbed the same camera off the desk that I used on a different walk yesterday, got in the car and headed over to the UT campus to meander around, photograph and reminisce about my long years there as, first a student and then a Specialist Lecturer in the College of Fine Arts. I was looking forward to seeing the crowds of students crossing the streets with cellphones firmly in hand. The perfect landscaping of the University. So easy to do when budgets are infinite and local labor is cheap. I was also looking forward to having a nice coffee at Medici Caffé. Right there on the main drag. Just across from campus.

I parked my car at a metered space about a half mile from the epicenter of my destination, tossed my camera onto my shoulder and meandered through the side streets and into the campus flow. Then I saw a great scene appear in front of me. A majestic building with an unending line of students passing in front. I turned the camera on and looked at the rear screen for confirmation of life only to find the dreaded notice on the LCD: "Warning! No memory card inserted !!!" and just like that the air came out of the fun balloon of my afternoon. Hard to take photographs, even with a Leica, if there is no memory card plugged into the card slot. 

It wasn't the end of world. It wasn't a job. No one I can think of was depending on me to inject some sort of new brilliance into the world of photography. But I was crestfallen because, well, I like to get things right and I hate it when I screw up the basics. I usually recharge the battery of the camera when I get home from a walk or a shoot. I usually download from the memory card the images I've taken as soon as I get home. And, as soon as I download images (automatically  backed up to a second HD...) I re-format the card and stick it back in the camera for next time. But, yesterday we were in a rush to meet people for dinner at a favorite restaurant and I broke with habit. Now to my chagrin... and embarrassment.

I re-learn stuff all the time. After I wrote that last paragraph I scrounged around and found five or six slightly older 64 GB SDII cards, put them in an appropriate container and stuck them into the center console of the car. Now, if I'm willing to circle back to the car to correct this kind of oversight in the future, they will be there waiting for me.

It's a pretty safe bet that I'm not the first photographer to trip over my own lack of attention to details. And it's not the first time I've left the house and gone somewhere only to find that either the memory card or the extra battery for the camera didn't complete whatever journey I planned. Never came along for the ride. But it's rare enough that I'd say it only happens once every five years or so. 

The other potential oversight/stumble usually involves either camera batteries or flash batteries. Nothing like going out on a cold day with a digital camera, watching the battery level gauge drop minute by minute as the chill wind cuts through your thin, cheap, Texas gloves and  only then realizing that the poor battery in your camera is flying solo. Once it's done its best and given its all your shooting day is over. Done. Makes one long for the old days of film when many cameras ran on double "A" batteries or were so totally mechanical they could be used without batteries. One less point of failure. Of course, those were the "good old days" when we might have assumed that there was a fresh roll of 36 exposure film in our camera only to find, while seeing the most beautiful, potential image imaginable, that your camera's frame counter stopped counting about 50 frames ago ---- because there was no film n the camera. There's always something that can go wrong. 

While it's easy to get frustrated by these small roadblocks that the universe sometimes conjures up to keep us on our toes my response today was to shrug my shoulders and continue on to the coffee shop for that perfect latté. At that point I really did consider my Leica as just expensive jewelry.

Chateau somewhere just outside of Paris proper.
In full costumes to amuse the American corporate clients
that paid a king's ransom to party in style...
The Champagne and caviar flowed like...whatever. 


If you went to Paris with an Olympus Pen FT camera and your camera's 
meter battery died you could still shoot the 72 frames on your roll of film
without issue. All the better if you were shooting color negative film and 
you were smart enough to figure out ballpark exposures....

 Same in Mexico City or Venice. 



Louvre. Is that a spiral staircase or just 
swirly bokeh?

On the streets of Madrid. Across from the Prado. 
Boat racing in the Jardin de Luxembourg.




Question: It is "upgrading" if you are adding a new camera but not getting rid of your current camera?

Can one "upgrade" from a newer camera to an older one? 

Is it okay to just own both?