Wednesday, November 22, 2023

One sentence blog posts seem to be a thing now. Let's see what I can do with that.... Here's a quick peek at the output of the Carl Zeiss ZM 35mm f2.0 Biogon lens. Blog O' the day...

 


I like this lens because: It's quite small and makes the camera it's mounted on look bigger; it's sharp as a weasel's teeth; it has a lovely contrast overall; if focuses very accurately on my M series camera; it was very affordable compared to used Leica M lenses; it uses the same hood and filters as the 40mm f1.4 Voigtlander lens: the aperture ring and focusing ring are both delightful to use: it has a very neutral coloration; but mostly because it makes very lovely photographs and can be used, with adapters, on most of the cameras I own; in fact, all of them; well, except for the Fuji GFX.

Methinks, perchance, that was all in one sentence. Scholars can now debate.

Austin Ballet Traditions. 





A bar."Cockfight." Nice paint colors.








Bring on the colors. 









fini.

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Emotional Support Camera.


 I realize that many of you; perhaps most of you, are so well grounded and so mentally healthy that the idea of any sort of additional emotional support might seem strange; even laughable. But some of us are not so fortunate. We have various phobias or anxieties that can interfere when things get rough. Or just make things worse.

A couple of decades ago I had a serious medical event and ended up in the emergency department of a local hospital. Then spent a week in intensive care. But on my way to the hospital I grabbed for my "security blanket." My old, crusty, Leica M3 and its 50mm Summicron lens. I kept it with me during my entire stay. It was a comforting companion. 

Back then I had a needle phobia. Stick me with an IV needle or even jab me with a simple injection and chances are I would immediately be in danger of hitting the floor and passing out. Either that or projectile vomiting. But somehow, with my camera in my hands I could make it through all the puncturing and injecting without falling completely apart. 

I can't remember taking any photographs during my stay. If I did they have not surfaced and most likely didn't survive.  And since my hair was a mess I'm glad I don't have to violate my own privacy and show selfies from that time. But I'm also glad that I kept my camera close and by focusing on it reduced my fears and trepidations about medical procedures. And the specter of a possible, untimely demise. 

Having something besides whatever catastrophe is unfolding in your life, that's out of your control, gives you an external thing upon which to focus. The distraction is a great thing. And the memory of your past time with the object of your distraction also brings back good feelings. Also medicinal. 

But, of course, most of you are immune to the foibles of being only human. And so maybe an Emotional Support Camera is unnecessary for you. That's nice.

Me? I still keep an ESC handy. You never know when you might need a good diversion from something less than fun. While my ESC at the time was a Leica I think any camera which you've used a lot and like a lot works well. I might have done equally well with the old Canonet QL17. But keep your ESC small enough to handle with one hand. Just in case the other hand is immobilized by an IV. Experience...

Sure. A Leica for a psychological support prop is expensive. But I'd rather have a prescription for a nice camera than for a bottle of Xanax.

Hope you have a fun and carefree Thanksgiving. Watch out for those "top ten" lists. They are sure to hit soon. 

Monday, November 20, 2023

Trying out the FujiXWeekly recipe for the Tri-X film emulation for Fuji cameras. Camera used is the Fuji GFX 50Sii. The recipe was originally created for use with X-tran sensor cameras. Seems to work fine here.

 

So, FujiXweekly is an app that is free to download from the Apple Store or the Google Play store. It gives you literally hundreds of "recipes" for setting your Fuji camera so that it works just like your favorite film in your favorite camera. It's aimed at Fuji camera users because it uses settings specific to Fuji camera menus in order to create the final profile. 

Here's a sample: (paragraph below from the FujiXweekly.com website). 

"I found that this recipe looks best when set to ISO 1600 or higher. From ISO 1600 to 3200, the results more resemble newer Tri-X 400 film. From ISO 6400 to ISO 12800, the results more resemble older Tri-X 400 film. I want to give a big thank-you to Anders Lindborg for creating this recipe, and sharing it—you are appreciated! Thank you!

Acros (+Y, +R, +G)
Dynamic Range: DR200
Highlight: 0
Shadow: +3
Noise Reduction: -4
Sharpening: +1
Clarity: +4
Grain Effect: Strong, Large
Color Chrome Effect: Strong
Color Chrome Effect Blue: Off
White Balance: Daylight,+9 Red & -9 Blue
ISO: ISO 1600 – 12800
Exposure Compensation: +1/3 to +1 (typically)"


The selection of film recipes is in no way limited to black and white or "monochrome." I like this Tri-X recipe so I tweaked it to my taste and saved it into on of the four available custom settings. Now, when I feel the desire to be more Robert Frank-ish I spin the dial from "A" to C1 and I'm ready to shoot.

As far as I know the apps on both platforms are free. If you have trouble with the phone apps or you are religiously or philosophically opposed to apps in general you could go to FujiXweekly.com and scroll around till you find the recipes you want. Just thought I'd share this so you can try a different way to dive into black and white imaging without tearing your hair out.

If you are going to browse the images please consider looking at them on a big screen. Thanks!




































Sunday, November 19, 2023

It's getting to be the time of the year when bloggers and vloggers fire up their keyboards or their video cameras and troll for affiliate cash in the biggest way. Get ready for those top ten lists!!!

 They are revving their engines. Doing their research. Trying to find out which photographic products will be in stock and which ones are in infinite backorder status. Why? Well, there's no cheese at the end of their tunnels if the "influencers" get you excited and give you links to products you can't buy. No sale means no commission, no spiff, no affliliate cash. So you wonder why each influencer touts different stuff and different brands throughout the year only to coalesce around best sellers in the last run up to the holidays? Wonder no more. It's much easier to reach into your wallet if there is a ground swell of consensus about "how great" a product is. And how much you need it. 

Here's my biggest prediction for this coming holiday season: No one will make a top ten list that includes: a Fuji X100V, a Leica Q3, a Ricoh GRiii, or just about anything else from Fuji, Ricoh or Leica. Why? Because they are mostly backordered. No sale means no cash. 

Here's another holiday sales prediction: The Panasonic S5ii will suddenly become many influencers' favorite new camera. Why? Because it's going on sale for $1699 and B&H and others would not promote a sale item if they could not fulfill the demand for the product. The price drop and the availability means a bonanza for bloggers and vloggers because people who want/need/covet a new camera will default to the products that yield instant gratification. Stuff you can get right now. Do you think the Ricoh GRiii X will make the "top ten cameras we want for Christmas" list? Not a chance as long as it's back-ordered everywhere. The S5ii, on sale, hits a price level with less resistance too!

I predict that influencers will try to differentiate between categories in their articles this year in order to get more reach. Instead of just a "top ten cameras" list I'm pretty sure we'll see a "top ten prime lenses" list, and a "must have ten zoom lenses" list, and a "top ten on-camera flash" list, and a "top ten favorite light modifiers" list (even from the "professional" available light photographers who never use flash). 

Once they get on a roll you just know that the next category will be: "The most professional and sought after camera bags." This from photographers who only weeks ago wrote about the fact that they abhor camera bags and only carry one camera and one lens at a time. 

Essentially our "favorite" content creators will steer you only to product that's readily available because, for them, back-order means "deal-killer." So what if they shoot with something different altogether? They are not in the business of making photographs, they are in the business of making you believe you must have certain products in order to be successful as a photographer. And they are in the business of linking you up with a retailer to supply you with those products. That's how they make money...

Remember the good old days when the photographers who blogged (and who we assigned credibility to) actually made their income from.....making photographs for clients? Or the tepid old days when they started to monetize their blogs and vlogs by hawking workshops? At least when they were selling workshops they posted examples and educational tutorials while trying to get you interested in traveling somewhere mildly interesting in order to stand around with many other photographers and soak in the "valuable" insights of the "pros." Now all pretense has vaporized and what's left is salespeople who are somewhat adroit at writing or producing video that's both entertaining and manipulative. Let's make a deal!

Gone are sentences like: "We shot with this lens as we were climbing Longs Peak in Colorado..." and have been replaced with: "I haven't shot with this lens yet, nor do I work with that brand of camera, but I've heard great things about it! Here's a link." Followed by, "Please use our links and support our site." 

I guess if I had my guilt gland surgically removed I would have written about a dozen posts praising the silver/chrome kit edition of the Leica SL2 camera with the 50mm APO Summicron lens. If I did and I wasn't as lazy about blogging as I seem to be I'd scatter links for the combo everywhere. Why? Because it's got an absurdly high price, looks cool, is an aspirational buy in some circles, and its high purchase price would net me huge affiliate commissions. Is it my favorite camera? At the tippity top of my top ten list? Naw, but it would be profitable. And right now it would be a lot easier to acquire than a Q3 or an X100V. And I'd get that payment from the outfit I linked to. Hell, I could hedge my bets and have affiliate links to multiple stores...

Is all this blogger and vlogger list making and promotion a "service" to loyal readers? Are they somehow being better educated by hungry bloggers? Naw, in most cases they are being guilt driven into supporting someone else's hobby. At best. 

But "no harm. no foul." Right? Every blogger will tell you --- hell, they'll put it in writing, that they get a small kickback from the retailer but it doesn't change the price you will pay for the product. So why should you care if they get paid for taking 30 seconds to prep a link? Well, hold on there for a second. Since there are now hundreds of thousands of photography "influencers" spread across TypePad, Word Press, Blogger, YouTube, TikTok, etc. their content has killed photo magazines as an advertising venue. The market for camera is too granulated and small for national TV advertising or wide audience targeting in other mainstream media so the camera and lens makers have turned to influencers and web channels as a sole conduit for advertising. (The influencer "firehose.") And it's easy to measure sales success in a digital universe. The data is right there. The gear makers and retailers have to set aside the percentage of the product price equal to the money they pay the influencers to "influence."  To convince you that you are doing a real service to a deserving content creator by clicking through their links. And that buying the product was a good idea which might even have originated from your brain. This raises the prices everyone; influencer audience member or not.

If you avidly read a blog or tune into a YouTube channel about photography frequently, and the crux of the content is about the gear (sometimes wrapped around fluffy essays about the "art" of photography) I think you may have discovered what caused your G.A.S. in the first place. It's the continuous bombardment about products and the relentless normalization surrounding the idea of continually upgrading that product. Going after a better and better grade of crack... "Upping your game." (So cynical).

I think it's a bit sinister that blogs and video channels have become nothing but defacto sales tools. In the beginning blogs and then vlogs were made with the idea of freely sharing information with other like minded people. Now going online to actually read the very limited amount of real, original content, is like wading through a thick and poorly designed catalog to find a sentence or paragraph positioned in the middle of mercantile propaganda which is remotely interesting or instructive. All the rest is the science, conscious or otherwise, of writing or generating content that makes you feel a kinship, a resonance, a commonality with the writer whose basic purpose is to turn their relationship with you into a business --- in lieu of holding down a real job or practicing a profession. If you have any doubt, ask yourself what these people would be writing about if there were no links. No cash incentive. No candy at the end. 

I can almost guarantee you that the content would not, week after week, be about the thrill of making a photograph of a neon sign on a brightly lit street, speckled with strangers walking by,  and how the experience of emulating what real photographers were able to so 25, 50  or even 100 years ago with much more primitive gear but much more creative talent, fills current creators with pride and wonder. It wouldn't be. We rarely get that good stuff now. Mostly it's just another top ten list of crap you should buy. Or an article insinuating how much alike you and your favorite content creator are. (building that bond). 

Want a real thoughtful blog about actual photography and art instead of gear? Go read Andrew Molitor's site: http://photothunk.blogspot.com/ He's damn sure not trying to sell you anything or to introduce you to the cult of Leica or Sony or Canon.

When I first started this blog I was hawking my lighting books. I had links back to Amazon and while I rarely wrote about the books in the actual content I did include the links at the bottom of articles, hoping not for affiliate cash but hoping instead that people would buy my books. I'd get a royalty payment for each one sold. But after a while it seemed too mercenary. So I stopped. And now I write about what I want to write about and while I'd love it if the content was enjoyed and appreciated by you the end result is NEVER to sell you something. Never to pull the money out of your pocket. I think it's more honest this way. And it's a hell of a lot more fun for me.

I wrote this because I had a visceral, negative reaction to all the top ten lists I saw during all the last 10 or 15 holiday seasons. I can't believe it's profitable enough as a business to make much sense. Maybe for a tiny few but most bloggers and vloggers are working for subsistence fees. I wonder if they would be happier just having a normal job?

Please keep this in mind while reading your favorite blogs and call me out on it if I ever join the "shopkeeper" pack. 

My takeaway? I think writers and videographers should decide to just put up a paywall and see, once and for all, if their readers at large really value the content they create. It would be an interesting experiment. I'd surely pay money to read or view a site with outstanding content and no commercial interruptions. Just as Flickr does with their professional level membership. Makes sense. At least to me.

Happy Holidays! Don't buy anything on this site!!!