Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Hot Walk. Museum Visit. Captions...

Old habits die hard. I could park close to the museum in a University parking garage but I'm so used to parking somewhere a bit further away for free. It's a hold over from early to mid-career when I had to watch every dollar I spent. Always trying to figure out how to save something to prepare for buying a house, putting a kid through college and hopefully saving enough to eke out a decent retirement. Breaking a habit is tough. I guess I'm still holding on to that "scrimp and save" mentality. When I decided to go to the Blanton Museum in the early afternoon it was just plain hot. But I found that parking space on LaVaca St. and I just couldn't help myself. 

But, if you park too close to wherever it is you are going you might miss some fun stuff along the way. I'm thinking printed newspapers are just about extinct...

I might have missed a bright red pickup truck in front of a mint green building. But I didn't. Good shoes. The right hat. Perfect sunglasses. Curiosity. 

It's queen Nefertiti. But I forgot to read the placard on the wall to see who the artist was. My bad...

Always check your camera settings if you are coming from a bright sun situation into a much darker museum environment. I still had the Q2 set for 1/250th of a second, f5.6. Thanks to Auto-ISO I was able to stumble through the process. But I did end up with an ISO of 6400. Hello noise.

Given the heat and humidity, and the fact that it was Tuesday and not a holiday, I thought the museum would be nearly empty of people. I was wrong. It was well attended. I think people are just tired of hunkering down, waiting for cooler weather. The museum was nice and chilly. It would have been even better if they'd been finished with a renovation of the café...

I meant to take the new Fuji MF camera with me but I thought it might add too much size and weight for a long slog on foot. I opted for my favorite, current point-n-shoot camera. A Leica Q2. Grows on me a bit more every time I take it out... Slow burn.


Part of the recent renovation of the courtyard/plaza space included these giant, fluted, shade constructions. On every visit to the museum I try my hand at how to photograph them better. I've got a ways to go.

On the way back to the car I had a long, long wait in the burning sunlight until I got a walk sign for the crosswalk. As I was standing at the intersection I thought to myself that this building across the street from me might be the most boring bit of architecture I've come across in a while. But I'm no expert. Far from it. I can't even keep the edges parallel. 

Loving the idea that World Peace might be obtainable through the delicious Tex-Mex cuisine. Sadly, the restaurant is now closed for good. We might never know if salsa and tortilla chips might be tools of our own salvation. Not just something fun to munch on with Margaritas. 


It's always sad when a good sandwich shop throws in the towel on a location. But Covid messed with a  lot of traffic patterns. Especially foot traffic. The flow changed and the customers vanished. Sad. It's a street that's close to the state Capitol and a few blocks further on it T's into the UT campus. I hope the four or five blocks between there and there get their mojo back soon and are reborn as restaurant and bar destinations once more. It would feel nice. 

Don't mind me, I've just been out in the dusk watering various potted plants. Gotta keep my flora buddies alive....

Tomorrow morning, after swim practice, I'm determined to get the Fuji out into the real world. See you after that.
 

The Blanton Museum Goes Yellow.


After swim practice and calculating and paying the state sales tax for the biz I got a tiny bit motivated to leave the house and see something new. Something beyond the pools and the walls of the office. I drove over to the University of Texas at Austin campus to visit the Blanton Museum (of Art). I presumed that going on an outrageously hot Tuesday afternoon would mean a nearly empty space but I was surprised at how many people were visiting the Art today. Families, solo appreciators, feckless tourists in Texas Summer clothing, etc. 

I was going to bring the new camera along for fun but after walking a few steps to the car at home I realized what a burden a big camera and big lens would be when out walking from my favorite parking to the museum a quarter mile away. I ducked back in the house and traded the big Fuji for the much smaller Leica Q2. In retrospect it was the perfect choice.

There were lots of things to photograph but one thing that struck me over and over again was the repeating use of yellow as part of the museum's branding. So I started looking for yellow stuff. 

I'm happy to have seen the main show one more time. Happier still to get out of the house and to use a camera. Happiest to weather the heat and arrive back at home unscathed. 

I hope your home town is cooler than mine today. If you live somewhere that is currently "suffering" through 60 or 70° "heat" please go out and photograph a bit for me. Just to do it. Just to appreciate the photographic potential provided by....comfort.




 

I have to stop complaining about the heat in Austin. Most of Southern Europe is having a much worse (and much more dangerous) time with this series of heat waves...



I was reading about the heat wave currently pounding Italy, Spain and Greece. The temperatures are higher there than here. Sure, we get a few days on which the temperatures crest 106° F. and then we complain about the heat index but I'm seeing temperatures over 114° F in large swaths of Greece and Italy and that's air temp; not "feels like." Actual, punishing heat. 

Why else should I put a sock in the complaining? Well, according to several articles I've read, about 90% of homes in the USA are air conditioned. I get that using a ton of electricity is going to be a hard burden for many who live on tight budgets here but as long as the AC works the issue doesn't rise to the level of existential peril. Not so for many parts of Europe where home installation of air conditioning is something like 10 to 12% !!!! That means there's no ready escape from the danger of being overheated. 

Sure, I worry about the Texas power grid but I've checked it every day and it's holding up well. And, as a fan of having back-up solutions to most mission critical aspects of my own life, then as long as the grid holds I'll be fine. If we have an issue with the home air conditioning systems we have the resources to have a new one central air system installed in a matter of days. And, as a safety back-up, the office which is just steps from the front door of the house has its own, separate air conditioning system which is relatively new and currently working well. We would have a quick refuge in which to wait out a system replacement for the house --- and vice versa. 

My biggest worry right now is just keeping the trees and the yard alive. And so far I'm working within the county drought restrictions and having about an 85% success score. But it sure doesn't look like rain any time soon.

I had coffee with my favorite camera addiction supplier photographer friend today. I wanted to hand him a check for the Fuji GFX50Sii before he heads out of town to cooler climes next week. We met at the halfway point between our two offices for cold coffee. As is typical we spent an hour just catching up and talking about our professional lives. We both had decent business in the first part of the year but as soon as the high pressure dome and the ensuing heat wave hit our home town both of our businesses flatlined. No calls. No appointments. Nada. 

We're both ready for retirement and neither of us is worried about paying the bills. We're not depending on the next head shot or architectural photo to keep from starving. But it's interesting how quickly the "tap" turns off when people feel paralyzed by the heat...

We both agreed that, like our clients, we're equally unmotivated to go outside after the early hours in the morning and that the thought of just moving gear from the studio to the car and the car to the client's location seems overwhelming --- and a stark impediment to even accepting jobs. 

Sad to have a new camera that I'd love to put through its paces but not having the stomach to get out in dangerous heat to do it. Better I think to bide my time and wait for a break in the weather. I hope we see it before Christmas...
  

This heat wave will end up costing billions and billions of dollars in lost economic opportunities. Much worse, it is already costing lives. Stay chilly. Visualize snow. 

Monday, July 17, 2023

Waiting for a new lens. Testing out black and white profiles. Staying out of the heat.

1:1 aspect ratio. Fuji 50Sii. Voigtlander 58mm f1.4 (nikon mount/adapted). 
Handsome male model; a stranger passing by.... naw. just me... Acros with G filter.
Loving the Jpegs...

Don't know about you but when I first get my hands on a very new to me camera there's a bit of fussing around, shopping and adapting that goes on. A process of getting a feel for the camera and the lenses and then deciding what's needed in the short term to really make the camera useful and ready to work the way you'd like it to. 

My first move is usually to buy a couple extra batteries but the camera came with three. There are buckets of fast, big SD cards sitting around the studio so, again, not a priority. 

The 50mm f3.5 lens is very nice and the adapted 58mm f1.4 Voigtlander lens is interesting and full of personality but I really wanted something just a bit longer. And a bit wider.

Almost everyone who has chimed in to comment on their experiences with this camera system has advised me to acquire the 35-70mm f4.5-5.6 Fuji zoom lens. Especially now while it's offered new for $500. The retail price is $1,000. When used in conjunction with the square format the lens is just long enough to make good portraits. And, when used in 4:3, it's just wide enough to do fun urban architecture shots. 

I ordered one from B&H and it should be here sometime mid-week. I can't wait to try it out. The only fault that gets mentioned about the "kit" lens is the slow speed of its maximum aperture. But outside during this Summer in Texas? Not an issue. Inside the studio for portraits? Also not an issue.

The camera is really nice. I'm happy with everything it does now that I've figured out how to magnify a frame when previewing -- while using a (non-Fuji) manual focusing lens. Once I learned that, and how to shoot without a Fuji lens attached, I starting feeling more and more at home with the whole kit. 

I'm resisting getting the lens I'd really like. That would be the 110mm f2.0 Fuji lens. It's kinda pricey at $2200 (on sale - new) but coming from Leica World it actually seems like a bargain. I think I'll spend some time with the current inventory until I feel a strong, pressing need for the ultimate portrait lens and then see where we are. 

There are some older, 35mm legacy lenses still kicking around that I'd like to try first. Like the Carl Zeiss 135mm f2.0 APO Sonnar ZF.2 lens. Which on the full frame of the 50Sii would be the equivalent angle of view as a 106mm on a 24x36mm sensor. Now, that would make for a really nice portrait lens...

I am also interested to find out how well the two Zeiss M series lenses (28mm and 35mm) I recently got work on this camera. Oh, and the Voigtlander 40mm f2.0 Ultron (nikon F mount); since I have already acquired the needed lens adapter....

Most prospective buyers who talk about wanting to use these cameras with some of their Nikon, Canon or Pentax lenses, designed for the 35mm format, seem to worry about whether or not the lenses will show a hard, mechanical vignette, and even if the lenses will fully cover the 33x44mm sensor. I have fewer concerns since I keep coming back to the idea of using the camera as a square format machine. Still, it's nice to know that some lenses made for the smaller format actually do a decent job in covering the sensor without a hard mechanical vignette. A soft, optical vignette being much easier to correct. 

A different topic: I've been so conscientious about getting to swim practice all month, in spite of the heat-inspired lack of any possible motivation. But I felt the need to give my brain a break from the pool today. I got up early and ran a three mile loop through the neighborhood. There's a long grade, about a quarter mile, up a hill that will really make one break a sweat. It was chilly when I laced up the shoes and headed out. A happy 80 degrees. Bearable in comparison to recent mornings. My time was not fast and it really wasn't meant to be. But running is different from walking and I don't want that rhythm to slip away from my muscle memory. 

After the run and a cup of nice, Columbian Supremo coffee (drip, of course....) I felt warmed up and still had some excess energy so I headed to the gym to work through my usual 45 minutes of strength training. I'll never be ripped, chiseled and all puffed up but I sure am working hard at keeping sarcopenia at bay. Three times a week seems to be my limit. Anything more and I'm too stiff and sore to sleep comfortably.  And then my flexibility falls apart...which is detrimental to effortless swimming. It's all interconnected. 

Finally: Rounding up talent to photograph for portraits is harder than I remember. As Austin gets hotter and at the same time more affluent more and more of the beautiful people decamp during the Summer months and go elsewhere. The selection of people that I want to photograph, but who also have open schedules and a desire to be immortalized, wanes with the heat. I'll keep trying. I'd like to get back into practice....

One more program note: someone chided me offline (email) about the silliness of "changing systems yet again after just recently pronouncing my everlasting love for the Leica cameras." The implication being that grabbing a new Fuji MF camera to use must mean that I will rush to abandon all the other cameras and concentrate for the moment on obsessing only about the Fujis. I just don't see that happening. The Fuji 50Sxxx seems like a much more niche camera. And I still have a crush on the Leica SLs (the original). The SL2 is still the prime choice for work and I pressed it into service recently for a healthcare client. One that required all the cool stuff Leica offers as well as needing macro lenses, wide lenses and longer lenses. It worked beautifully. And the extra depth of field was mission critical...

Let me enjoy a fun camera without making it into a drama about the futility and neurosis of system changes. At least until you see me snap up a GFX 100S and a box full of Fuji primes..... Just sayin. 

It's okay to have both. Really. I even asked my spouse. She said it would be fine. "As long as it's fun."

I wanted to see how the Voigtlander 58mm f1.4 Nokton looked when I used it on the Fuji 50Sii. I had the camera set to record in a 1:1 aspect ratio and took this image at f2.8 with the lens adapted for use on the camera with a Novoflex adapter. The focus was set onto the spine of the cinematography book near the left side of the stack. That's a somewhat out of focus photo of a photo of my dad in his old University office. Most of the books on the shelf are mine. Even the one in Chinese....

And look!!! No vignetting in the square!



 

Saturday, July 15, 2023

The Limitations of sharing photographic images on the web.


Images from a workshop. Taken with an Olympus E-3 camera.


I recently got my hands on a Fuji 50Sii. It's a fun camera. The sensor is 70% bigger than the sensors in my full frame Leicas (how can that be, if the Leicas are "full frame" ??? Rhetorical, no answer needed). I took the new camera and the one lens I have for it outside to make a few photographs and see how the camera operates, and how I think I might use it in the future. 

The images I took were images of convenience but I shared them to give readers a general idea of how the photos look and to mate the illustrations with some operational observations about the camera. It was definitely a "first blush" run and while I am not a gear reviewer by trade I think my experience with cameras, translated into a series of blog posts, can be worthwhile for others who might be contemplating the same kinds of purchases. 

It's hot here in Austin. And on the day of my maiden voyage with the Fuji the heat index ended up reaching 110°. Needless to say I didn't have the energy, or even the safety margin, to spend a lot of time making nuanced and exciting images. But I did figure out how to expose with the camera, how to operate all the controls and how to effectively compose with the slightly wide lens I have to work with. 

Here's where it all gets tricky. When I get back to the office, make a ritual sacrifice to the Texas air conditioning gods, and change into less sticky clothes, I finally get around to transferring the raw images I've taken onto my computer. It's a fairly nice computer. It's a "fully loaded" Apple iMacPro and that means it can make short work of big, uncompressed files but more importantly it means I can see the files on a 27 inch Retina monitor. 

When I bring files into PhotoShop I can zoom in on the images to my heart's content. I can look at the corners of a frame at 200, 400 or even 800 % (though I have no idea why I should or even if I should). I can look at how the camera and lens, working together, have handled fine details and I can see if there is  or isn't a lot of reprehensible noise in the shadow areas ---- really. The inspection tools at my disposal are nearly endless. For example, if I want to see how an image looks printed I can output it at up to 13 x 19 inches here in the office. If I want to see it enormously large I can send a file to my local custom lab and see what it looks like at up to 4x6 feet.

But. But! At some point we have to take these high bit depth, 51 megapixel files and translate them in several ways. First, I have to resize them to 3200 pixels on the long end in order to be able to upload them to Blogger and not pay enormous storage fees to Google. I usually resize all the files that you see here to 3200 pixels and use a Jpeg setting of 92% when saving them. So, as you can see, I've already tossed away lots of information which affects both the color rendering of the images but also the definition and "nano-acuity." 

That progression of steps homogenizes the images somewhat with every other image shown on various share sites. It reduces the positive attributes that make good images from very good cameras look different --- by a lot. I get it. I see that myself. I can look at a Fuji MF file or a Leica SL2 file in a near perfect viewing situation in my studio where I also control the viewing conditions making sure that when I look at the calibrated screen its environment is consistent and I've done a good job eliminating surfaces around the monitor that might introduce color casts. 

But if I upload a beautiful image and then walk into the house, pick up an iPad and view it there I am always a bit disappointed. Something is always, inevitably lost.

If I'm sharing images with 92% of internet users I can expect them to be looking at the same images on a phone screen. If the viewer is lucky he or she is looking at them on a big, bright, Apple iPhone 14 Pro screen and at least seeing them in a color profiled version. Less so on a lesser phone. But now the images are much smaller still, and depending on the service provider are probably also crunched/compressed even further. No image seems to get out alive...

I write all this in order to explain why I go to the trouble to walk outside and point new cameras at known (to me) objects. I test the cameras because, in fact, I still make a living using them to make images for paying clients. And not all of the client's have moved exclusively to web-based advertising mediums. In fact, the more esoteric or "high end" the client the greater potential exists that they'll be using the images in very well produced, printed brochures as well as in trade show graphics that can be quite large; and most of which will be inspected from a close distance. Some very large prints also end up on the walls of corporate offices --- a demanding sub-specialty for sure!

Several commenters recently pointed out that for just walking around and shooting casual photographs that any camera would work. And they point to scenes I've shot on APS-C cameras, full frame cameras, and even m4:3 cameras. And frequently they will make the statement that they cannot see any worthwhile (or even perceptible) differences between any of the camera systems that were used to make any of the images. As though all of my intention is to produce work that will be shown solely on smaller screens. Compressed onto the web.

My photography yesterday had two objectives. First was to get out of the house, avoid "cabin fever" and secondly to familiarize myself with a new camera system and a different interface than the ones I've been using for the past several years. The outing was not intended to create a gallery show of amazing images. (but God knows I try....). I was basically inviting you along for the walk as I tried out the features of the new camera. 

Could I have made similar images with my iPhone? Even though it's a five year old XR? Sure. Why not? And as long as the only place I used the phone images was on Instagram or as reduced size images for the blog I'm sure the quality would have been fine. But I already know how to make photographs with my phone while I am just getting started with the big Fuji. 

Some people seem to be so busy saving me from myself. Helping me save my money. Helping me become content with the status quo of my cameras. Helping me stay the course and reject anything new. But that's more or less antithetical to everything I've written here since 2009. Right?

I really like using a variety of cameras and formats. I've shot with everything from 8x10 view cameras to 16mm Minox cameras --- and pretty much everything in between. The individual camera is part of a creative process and nearly every camera brings something new and different to the act of making photographs. I see it all over my own house and office. Formal, square, black and white images from old Hasselblads, 35mm style photographs of Ben running cross country or swimming in races taken with assortments of fast 35mm style cameras and long lenses. Travel shots with a Mamiya 6. Industrial shots with everything from 4x5 inch view cameras to the latest Leica SL cameras. Each has its own "personality" and its own strengths and I choose them depending on the look and feel I'd like to impart for a particular kind of image. Or to impart a look and feel that a clients commissions.

One thing that tipped me over into accepting my friend's kind offer regarding the highly discounted and very complete Fuji 50Sii kit was having looked around my home base and seeing just how many square, black and white images are on the walls. B. loves the format. I love the format and yet it somehow doesn't work as well for me when I just set a 24 by 36mm DSLR or mirrorless camera to a 1:1 aspect ratio. I want a bigger format, more surface area on the sensor instead of just more resolution. I'm experimenting with the Fuji because of both the 38 megapixel square file I can make in the camera but also because the bigger (size not res) of the sensor means that the 38 million pixels are bigger than the pixels on a full frame sensor cropped into a square. As I've said many times, I believe that bigger pixels are different...better. I wish someone would make a square format digital camera with a sensor as big as the 6x6 cm negatives that film cameras could make. But to add one to the mix it would have to be relatively affordable. Say $10K instead of >$60K. 

So the Fuji is, by that way of thinking, a compromise. But a very easy and affordable one to accept for me. 

I look forward to shooting many, many square images. Mostly portraits. Environmental and otherwise. But when I share them with you and you choose to look at them on a cellphone screen you won't see what I see and you won't see what my friends see when they drop by and look at the prints hanging, matted, in nice big frames, on our walls. You just won't. 

Does that mean I should stop posting images at all? Stop adding photo illustrations to what I write? I guess if enough of you think it's a waste of time I could stop. It would save me time and effort. But frankly, I think the images, even if they are variations on stuff you've already seen, add something to a package of writing here. 

But we're nothing if not flexible....

As to everyone trying to save me money...stop. I would not spend money on cameras and lenses if I did not have it. As one of my much wealthier friends remarked a few days ago when I asked her if I should buy yet another camera:

"will you enjoy it? Can you make art with it? If you buy it will your family have to start shopping at the Dollar Store?"

to which I responded: "What's a 'Dollar Store'?"

To sum up: I like working with a variety of cameras and enjoy the challenge of mastering new cameras. I'm sharing images because it seems like a good enough way to share my photo walks across thousands of miles and many different cultures. There are limitations in sharing and viewing work on the web. Everything, everything! gets compressed and changed. In that regard I'm doing the best I can to make sure stuff looks as good as I can make it under the circumstances. 

If you'd like me to stop sharing images please indicate so in the comments below. We'll see. 

Finally, fourteen years of writing and sharing about my relationship with photography should convince you that I'm incorrigible when it comes to buying, using and enjoying new cameras. That doesn't mean I don't enjoy the "pure activity and results of taking photographs" in the least. I love making images that resonate with me. You might not like them and that's okay. But don't equate what I buy with how passionate I am with the actual process. You should know better.

And if you slag me for spending some money on a cool lens and then I find out you have shitty camera gear but are driving a shiny, new Maserati --- we really need to talk.... you might have your priorities all screwed up. I might be able to help you...


 

Friday, July 14, 2023

Sometimes it takes curiosity and a new camera to get heat shocked Austin photographers outside in the Summer. A few thoughts about my first real immersion back into the Fuji world; via the GFX50S-2

 


The house and the studio/office were both nice and chilly this morning. I'd have stayed in bed and luxuriated in the cool embrace of interior paradise but for the siren call of our morning swim workout. I hauled myself out of bed, dressed in the almost obligatory summer wear (thin, floppy, long sleeve shirt with an SPF rating of 40; dress shorts, Teva sandals, and a Fjall Raven wide brimmed hat) and headed over to the pool. After a long workout I headed back home to grab some chow and to also grab today's object of curiosity and interest: the Fuji GFX 50Sii. Oh...and the 50mm f3.5 lens for that system. 

In the interest of a vaguely objective appraisal I opted to shoot in Fuji's raw file format and I set the camera for the way I like to shoot when there's no money on the table. That would be in Aperture mode, Auto-ISO (diligently overriding the EV control), white balance set to the little "sun" icon and the lens set to f5.6. Single point AF using S-AF and that's about it. As simple as I can make the process. 

Some observations. The camera is fairly heavy and feels dense. That's fine. It's in the same ballpark as the Leica SL2 and I'm used to carrying that around for hours with no discomfort. The native aspect ratio of the sensor is 4:3 which is more square than the typical 3:2 and that means when and if I crop the frame and shoot at 1:1 I don't lose as much overall resolution. At 1:1 you are still getting about 38 megapixels of data.

The 50mm f3.5 lens I got with the kit is bulky but not too heavy. It's a nice partner for the camera and keeps the whole package reasonably small. 

I have a simple adapter for Nikon F to Fuji GFX lens mounting. I have four Nikon F mount lenses to play around with. They are: Voigtlander 40mm Ultron, Carl Zeiss ZF 50mm f1.4 Planar, Nikon/Nikkor 50mm f1.4, and the Voigtlander 58mm f1.4 lens.  All are interesting and good in their own way. The Ziess lens and the Voigtlander 58mm are exceptionally good once you move past f2.0 ( using f2.8-f8.0 to get the good stuff). All four of the lenses vignette on the mini-medium format sensor in the GFX but not by much. The 58mm has the least vignetting. Since my plan is to use the camera in the square format I am happy to report that all of the lenses work at that aspect ratio with minimal to no vignetting and few optical issues. 

I would like something longer but I need to work with the camera for a while before I decide how to proceed. I may, just for a change, shy away from diving into endless legacy permutations and go directly to the GFX 100-200mm zoom. But that's still way off in the mists of the future.

One thing about the GFX50Sii that I have to say I really love is the top mounted display with the big wheels which show the aperture and the ISO, or the aperture and shutter speed setting (depending on how you have them set).  The display is a perfect for a quick glance and it's always on so you don't have to turn on the camera and wait in order to see your settings. 

I'm not sure the back panel is as well calibrated for relative exposures and I found that I kept using exposure compensation set at minus one stop in order to make the EVF or the rear screen expose the way I wanted. But, of course, when I got back to the computer my in the field compensation made for files that were actually darker by half to three quarters of a stop than what I was seeing by "eyeball measurements." Lesson learned? Trust the meter or experience over the previews.

None of the images I made today were a tough test for any modern camera or lens. I was working with bright sun and stationary objects. I was using the camera with a shutter speed that was usually up in the 1/2000th second area and a modern 50mm lens used at f5.6 should be just about bulletproof. 

I spent a couple hours just walking. From about 10:30 till about 12:30 pm and then it just started getting too hot. Really. Too hot. Also the battery, which had a charge reading of 76% when I left the house has dropped down to two bars --- or around 25%. It was time to call an end to today's joust with hostile weather. The earth has resources/weapons at its disposal that I'll never be able to beat. 

The files look great in Lightroom. Easy to work with and, I hope you can see for yourself in the samples, filled with incredible dynamic range. Easily one of the best DR performances I've personally experienced.... 

The lens is sharp, the camera is straightforward and fun to use, the hat was superb. Click through and see for yourself. These are all minimally processed in Lightroom, converted to Jpegs and pushed up to the web to enjoy the tender mercies of compression and other forms of partial destruction. But I think they still hold up fine. 

The camera and lens are keepers. Not sure I would have spent the list price on the package but happily part with cash at the price I did agree on. 

Stay cool. Have fun. Now that it's over 102° the logical thing to do is take a nap on the couch, under the ceiling fan, with an icy Pellegrino at hand. Ciao. 































Square black and white portraits coming up next....

Thursday, July 13, 2023

An interesting detour from our usual Leica-centric programming. Taking care of a blind spot. Using "retail therapy" to combat the heat stress. Too good a deal to pass up? How do I order more lenses? Oh shit.

 

Fujifilm GFX 50S ii. For those times when you find yourself on an 
endless backorder status for the Fuji X100V... 

We're setting records left and right here in central Texas. But not in a good way. We're under the blisteringly hot thumb of a high pressure system ("heat dome") that just won't quit. The actual air temperature right now is 104° but the "heat index", because of the high humidity, is 110°. I've stopped going outside after ten in the morning. Except when I run out of coffee...it's just too hot.

But that sure leaves me with more time on my hands than I am used to. Or want to get used to. Sure, the pool is great and swimming from 7-9 in the morning is now the prime time, but after a while one longs for more than a daily swim and some time spent at Gold's Gym (thankfully, well air conditioned). So I work on my book project (number 8) and when that gets old I look at cool cameras online. 

I got a call from a close friend who, if you can believe this!!! buys and sells more gear in a year than I think I've owned in ten. He's super interested in cameras and lenses and buys stuff, tries it out and then moves it on. Anyway, he recently got a spectacular deal on a Fuji GFX 50Sii and a 50mm GFX lens.

He tested the camera, liked it okay and then moved on to something else. I asked him about the camera and he asked me if I wanted to try it out. Sure. He dropped by yesterday with the original boxes, extra batteries, an Arca Swiss plate, a Nikon lens adapter, and a dual battery charger (the camera comes only with a charging cable). All in new condition. I spent most of the latter part of the evening going through the menus and learning how to use the camera. Having owned a bunch of Fuji cameras (Xe30, XT3, X-Pro2, X100V, several SH1s, etc.) there was very little I didn't understand. But you never know and it's best to work through the details before you take a camera out on the street. Less futzing around. Fewer lost shots.

My friend offered the package to me for a song today. We just finalized the deal. I guess that makes me the owner of a new (to me) medium format digital camera. And now the fun begins...

Sadly, it was just too f$**ing hot to go out and test the camera in the streets today. I'll try to get up extra early tomorrow.... Do some pre-swim photos. 

Hope you are having a cooler Summer than I am. three words of advice: Wide.Brim.Hat.* 

*Even if you can do no better than a Tilley.

comments have returned. Be nice. It's too hot to put up with B.S. and snark.