Friday, September 15, 2023

Two hours in with the Leica M240. How do I like it so far? What do the files look like? How are the batteries? Would I do it again?


The Leica M240 arrived from the Leica Store Miami yesterday. I started charging the two batteries that came with it. The packing of the product was impeccable. The camera came in the original box along with all the original cables, manuals, and other materials. In addition to an extra battery there was also an accessory thumb grip. Nice. The guys at Leica Store Miami do a great job curating the used equipment the sell. Their standards for accepting used gear are high and that means when you buy used gear from them you get a well inspected, well considered product. This is the fifth Leica camera body I've bought from them in two years and I'm still impressed by their service. 

(Disclaimer: I don't work for them, am not sponsored in any way by them, don't get any free gear and don't even get a mild discount. I asked for one. It was not forthcoming..... just so you know). 

What the heck is a Leica M240? It's Leica's first big attempt to bring the M series rangefinder cameras into a modern field of cameras. It's a well built rangefinder camera in the tradition of the Leica M3 and subsequent film models. It's full frame as was its predecessor, the Leica M9 but where the M9 had a Kodak CCD imaging sensor the M240 was fitted with a full frame, 24 megapixel, CMOS sensor that is NOT a Sony product. The sensor was designed and produced by two European companies. Details from Wikipedia here: 

The M uses a CMOS 24-megapixel (6,000 × 4,000 pixels) image sensor designed for Leica by the Belgian company CMOSIS,[5] and made by STMicroelectronics in Grenoble.[5] The pixels are on a 6 x 6 µm² grid.

The move to a CMOS sensor allowed for the inclusion of video capabilities but more importantly it made the M240 the first Leica full frame rangefinder camera to feature live view. Which opens up other features such as more advanced metering and the ability to use punch in magnification for fine focusing.

Except for special editions the M240 was the last M series rangefinder camera in the family to use brass for the top and bottom plates. Cameras after the M240 used aluminum alloy, which is lighter, but doesn't give you that nice warm brassiness when the finishes wear off on the edges of the camera. The brass cameras feel denser and more stout. 

To keep up with the new features unleashed by the CMOS sensor Leica gave the M240 a much bigger battery that the ones found in previous or newer models. If you choose not to use the live view and video features this bigger battery translates into a much improved battery life. When I was out shooting this morning I didn't take along a spare battery --- on purpose. I wanted to see what one of the two batteries I'd been sent would do in a long walk scenario. I switched off live view and even shut off the automatic review on the LCD screen. I left the camera on from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. It was set to go to sleep after 30 seconds of no action on my part but the joyous and exhilarating thing I found out first is that it wakes up in less than a second. A light touch on the shutter button and you're ready to go.

The second thing I found out was that in spite of shooting nearly 200 exposures in the raw/DNG format and chimping nearly every shot the battery still had 85% of its charge left in the tank. Nice. Really nice. 

When I was getting ready to leave the house this morning I knew I wanted to use the Voightlander 50mm f2.0 APO lens on the camera this morning. I had several reasons for this. First, I wanted to shoot a bunch of stuff close and wide open so I could make sure the rangefinder calibration with right on the money. It was. Second, I spent a couple of years back in the 1980s shooting with nothing but a 50mm lens on the Leica M3 rangefinder I had back then. It was a 50mm Summicron. Also an f2.0. A bit of nostalgia for sure, but also a nod toward the fact that I'm now wearing glasses and wanted to see the rangefinder patches clearly, as well as the edges of the 50mm frame lines. Too wide a lens and I'd have to ditch the glasses to take it all in.

The camera and lens together are wonderful. Made for each other it seems. If I knew I'd never accept another commercial job I was rush out and find a couple more pristine M240 cameras, sell everything else, sell everything in the studio and never look back. Getting an M camera back in my hands was like walking back into my Grandmother Tuck's kitchen and smelling cookies baking and peaking into the oven to catch a glimpse of a perfect roast... Like coming home.

I have four lenses to use with the M240. Two are Zeiss (28 Biogon and 35mm f2.0 Planar) and two are Voigtlander lenses. One of the VMs is the ridiculously good 50mm f2.0 APO Lanthar lens and the other is the 40mm f1.4 Nokton "Classic." All four are good, semi-modern lenses and they are a delight to use without the need for adapters which end up adding to their size. 

I thought I'd have a much longer learning curve to get back into the saddle but by the time I arrived back home for lunch, around 1:30, I felt like I knew every square inch of the camera, how to set it up and most importantly --- how to use it. Don't know about anyone else but I find rangefinder focusing quicker and easier than any ANY AF camera I've ever used. It just feels natural. 

So, what do the files look like? Well, I've included a bunch below. A couple have adjacent files which are 100% crops. I think the files are nice and detailed but I didn't expect less. There is more noise at ISO1600 and ISO3200 than on a more modern sensor but not much different than the sensor in the SL cameras. And with the new A.I. noise reduction in Lightroom it's easier to fix the noise than it is to talk about it. 

Would I do it again? Meaning buy an M240 after having played with this one? You've got to be kidding. I'm already on the prowl to add a second nearly similar body - -- the Leica M-P. It's an upgraded version of the M240 with a two GB buffer and twice the speed of the M240. The body is pretty much the same. As is the look of the files. But it's also a bit stealthier --- with no red status logo on the front. I will do it again. Count on it. 

Should you buy one? Naw. You should shun them whenever you see one on the market. And then you should send me a quick note with the name and address of the seller. As quick as you can. 

No animals were harmed in this transaction or test. No bank accounts or investment accounts will collapse as a result of this expenditure. The universe will not implode (any time soon). Just thought I'd share my first time back with an M in a long time. And my first ownership of a digital M camera. It's fun. 

Now, you know, you can click on the images below in your browser if you want to see them enlarged...

B. Having breakfast in the kitchen. Reading. Always reading. 

A 100% crop of the above image one above. 

Post St. Patrick's Day? 

clutter collage. 

It's always fun to walk down the back alleys. Well, maybe not at 2 in the morning...
But around the UT campus the best impromptu "murals" are to be found off the 
streets and in the alleys.


Good dynamic range chops.

The current state of print journalism on the UT campus. 

click in because I think this random photo shows off the 3D characteristics at least of the lens.

While out on the walk I went to the Humanities Research Center (aka: The Harry Ransom Center) to see a new show of very old books. I was the only visitor in the galleries this morning. But it was fascinating to see how well preserved some books from as far back at the 1300s were. 
Most books disappear before they age into permanence. Writers hope for immortality
but damn few see it. The first published book of John Milton's "Paradise Lost" was under glass in a case this morning. Amazing. 


Yes. The Leica M240 does fine at ISO 1600. With an assist from noise reduction in Lightroom.
But you would have had to look into the shadows under the table to really see the noise 
originally in the file. 

A section on the importance of the cover art. In some cases books were produced 
with the content merely being filler for the design and craftsmanship of the covers. 



 The first published volume of Shakespeare's plays....



Exterior. HRC. At UT Austin. Also home of the Gernsheim collection of photography. 
World class collection, indeed. 


the Ellsworth Kelly Chapel on the campus at the Blanton Museum. Exterior. 

From the HRC I headed over to the Blanton Museum of Art to take in two new shows. One is a collection of Mayan art from the Los Angeles museum and the other is a show using articles from the Blanton's permanent collection to create a keen dialog about climate change. Both are worth seeing. 
One upstairs and one downstairs. No freebies today. I had to pay the full "senior" fare of $12. 





this was my favorite modern image in the climate change exhibit.

I ended my visit to the Blanton with a quick visit to the Battle Sculpture Collection. It's a favorite of mine. The entire collection used to be housed on the second floor of the HRC but this small handful of replica sculptures are all that remains visitable by the public. And I'm a sucker for statues. Very fun to photograph and they never move when you don't want them to....


Obviously, a tight crop of the image one above. 



"Alley Art. #1"

"Alley Art. #2"

Trying my timid hand at street photography. Got a rangefinder. Just had to try...


Subjective for sure but... my best shot of the day.




More from and about the M240 to come. 

Please stay tuned. Please consider commenting. 

Please consider doing it authentically instead of advancing
some passive aggressive agent. 

As they say:

have a nice day.






 

Thursday, September 14, 2023

There's more to photography than weddings and Little League. But it's complicated. At the same time it's fun.

In the United States, within 30 seconds of meeting someone new inevitably one person or the other will ask, "What do you do?" Meaning, clearly, "what business/industry are you involved with and what is your function in that business?"

I guess it's important in our culture to be able assign a new connection to an appropriate slot in the hierarchy of work. Easier to figure out what your relationship should be. Where you are on the pecking order. Etc.

When I tell people that I am a photographer they immediately head to the default pigeon hole and ask me about wedding photography. Or family portraits. Or.....high school yearbook photographs. Fathers might ask which kids' sports I like to photograph. And then they usually dig in for something more blunt. They almost always ask: "And can you make a living at that?" Or some variation on: "Is that a full time job or is it something you do around your regular work?"

I guess I should count myself lucky that most of my friends, as well as the members of my immediate family, are engaged in marketing, advertising or public relations and understand the enormous diversity of niches and specialities which exist in the field of photography. And most of the rest of my friends are actually....commercial photographers. Or swimmers. But swimmers are much more interested in how you swim, what stroke you favor, and/or where you swim. 

A neighbor saw me loading gear into my car the other day. It was a Wednesday morning. He greeted me and stopped for a moment to chat. I'm sure I told him at some point in the last few years that I worked as a photographer and he remembers that but he seemed a bit confused. "Who has a wedding in the middle of the week?" He asked.

He was surprised to hear that I was off to shoot behind the scenes images, social media and some advertising images that were all about Texas beef. We chatted for a few minutes more and he asked me why I needed so many cases of gear. Most of the photographers he's seen on TV or in the movies were just carrying a camera or two around their necks and had some sort of distressed leather or canvas camera bag drooping over one shoulder. 

I assured him that I needed the stuff in the cases to set up lights for celebrity style portraits. I needed stuff in the other cases to augment existing light in the kitchens and to use as fill light out in the sun. The other cases were full of different cameras and lenses because....I might need them for something the advertising agency and I hadn't thought about yet. He seemed to get it. 

He would have been mystified had he been on the set of our project last week. I was a small part of the overall production. I was the still photographer on a video set. Sure, I had to set up and light a white background in our little makeshift portrait studio but all the heavy lifting for the live action video of a cooking show was done for me; at least a day in advance.  That sure made my job easier and more relaxed.

I thought it would be fun to look through the files and find some of the BTS photos I shot in order to show just how weird it looks when you find yourself in a working video set for a while. I felt more like a tourist than part of the crew but, then again, our targets and goals were different. 

Because I get bored and restless on 10-12 hour long shooting days (there's a lot of re-setting of multiple video cameras and lights between sections of the video production: dead spots, so to speak) I like to bring along a bunch of different cameras to see what works best and how different they can all look. It gives me stuff to play with during longer pauses.

On this project I shot with a Fuji GFX 50Sii, a Leica SL2, A Leica SL, and a Leica Q2. Each, in its own way, was interesting and good. Next time I'll narrow down to just the SL2 and the Q2. That will cover everything and keep the rolling case quite a bit lighter. Might sub an SL2-S instead; for the low light.

Interesting that so many think we're out shooting weddings all the time but instead we're spending full days making weird and wonderful images for advertising in its various forms. A lot has changed. Even more has stayed the same. It's pretty much always been this way in the minds of consumers. Muggles.

Here are some random BTS images from the shoot. File info where my memory allows....

Searing gorgeous medallions over a gas flame. Step one...
Leica SL2 + 24-90mm. Wide open...

Yvette. Our food stylist who duplicated some of the recipes so the in-house photographer
could do food "hero" shots for the web. 
Leica SL + Voigtlander 50mm f2.0

The view from the other side of the counter. Big lights all around.
Leica SL + Voigtlander 50mm f2.0

One of our talents prepping a dish while a mobile camera operator gets ready to 
do some close up footage of the dish being prepared.

Lead DP on the center stationary camera. Also calling out 
camera direction to the two mobile and two other fixed location cameras. 
Behind him an engineer is monitoring all five feeds on a series of monitors.

A shot of the team getting ready to video tape and photograph
the judges who are out of frame on the left...In this scene you have the two
mobile camera ops which EZY-rigs and peaking out of the left hand side of the big, white reflector 
is a tripod mounted stationary camera as well.
A 90° angle from the shot one above. Little camera mounted monitors everywhere.
I should have brought mine so I could fit in...


Judges table in the background. Camera on "sticks" in the center of the frame, two operators
on the other side of the big, black panels, and another stationary camera 
over on the far right of the frame. 

Upstairs in the interview studio two cameras with two different focal length lenses
are trained on the interview subject to allow for quick punch ins during editing.
Sumo monitor to the left of frame. 
Leica Q2.

Danielle searing fillets. In the kitchen. A clean background but if I flipped the camera 180°
you'd see at least three video cameras following her action. 
SL2 + 24-90mm.


Miking up a judge for a sit down interview. Shotgun mic at the top right corner.

microphone reset after the still photographer stumbled into the boom arm. 
No damage done to either....

fin.