Hi, Ken,
I had to submit a photo of myself recently. I tried the E-1 and 14-54, and
found that 25mm FL worked ok, but I could never get what I wanted, using AF.
I changed to my Leica Elmarit-R 28mm, focused with a yardstick and scale,
and got some very sharp images. Actually, for an 81-yr old with flabby neck
skin, they were too sharp. I worked with them and finally got some that I
could use. Yes, too sharp does often bother me.
Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ken Norton" <ken@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Olympus Camera Discussion" <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, May 23, 2011 10:49 AM
Subject: [OM] Feeble attempts at getting it out of my system
> Saturday, I went for a hike. It was partly cloudy--plenty of skud-style
> clouds to work with. Interesting enough of a sky with intermittent
> sunshine
> punctuated by overcast. Wind was blowing strong enough that keeping a hat
> on
> was problematic.
>
> Travelled light. I had the OM-3Ti with just the 50/1.4 lens. A set of B&W
> filters and my GPS rounded out the kit. 1.5 rolls of B&W film. Oh, and a
> polarizer.
>
> Most of the pictures were taken with the orange filter. Red made the green
> grass to too dak and lose the subleties. As the green is all fresh, the
> orange filter did a great job of lifting it up in tonalitiy without the
> artifical look which a green or blue filter gives. The polarizer was glued
> to the lens. I love how it, combined with a orange or red filter just
> makes
> the clouds jump out of the sky.
>
> There were probably two pictures which will make it into print--possibly
> three. Not much, but we are talking about nice 11x14 prints, not 5x7s. I
> composed for the larger print size. The IMAX screen of the OM-3Ti is just
> so
> much fun.
>
> Well, I looked at the stockpile of film in the freezer. I counted 24 rolls
> of B&W film (36 exp) for the Colorado trip. There is also a wad of NPZ. As
> much as I dislike negs over slides, the cost of slidefilm with processing
> is
> problematic. Therefore, I'll pick up a few more rolls of discounted Ektar
> 100. Otherwise, as SWMBO has spoken, digital will help pick up the heavy
> lifting of color. (maybe).
>
> But not all this weekend was B&W film. The E-1 with 35-80 served extensive
> duty yesterday as it will again this evening for a portrait session. BTW,
> I
> don't know what I'm doing wrong, but the E-1 has NAILED the WB two times
> in
> a row! Be very afraid!
>
> Went to a graduation party for a relative who I did the senior pictures
> for.
> It was fascinating seeing the large prints in actual presentation, framed,
> matted and hung. Some pretty good stuff. The bulk of these pictures were
> taken with the Panasonic DMC-L1 with the Leica 14-50. I know it's got to
> be
> just me, but is anybody else bothered when they see a print which is
> biting
> sharp? I think, especially when it comes to portraiture, that you can have
> too much detail. That camera-lens combination just seemed a little edgy to
> me. Regardless, everybody said good things about the shots and I think I
> got
> two more customers out of the deal.
>
> Tonight's shoot is with the E-1 and 35-80/2.8 zoom. That is one really
> nice
> portrait setup.
>
> AG
> --
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>
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