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The Geometry of Night
The requirements for photographing at night versus day are as different as… well… as night and day. This article proposes that night photography is best approached not as a challenge of light, but as a challenge of subject.
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I Heart Rangefinders
I used to think concert photography went with SLR cameras like eggs went with ham. Well, cancel that side of ham and bring me some of that rangefinder bacon. In this article I confront life after SLRs, and schlep a couple of Leica rangefinder cameras to a Heart concert.
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Ruminations on a 50mm f/1.1 Nokton
I’m in love with the night. I enjoy the mysteries that lurk in the darkness, the enigmatic shapes, and the cavernous infinity of a bottomless shadow. In fact, I love the night so much that I want to photograph night itself — and not flood it with artificial daylight. As any photographer knows, the solution…
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And the Meaning of Life Is…
The internet is boiling over with pretty pictures. Galleries are stuffed full of pretty pictures. Pretty pictures fill the pages of a million different magazines. Photography is now about the medium, not the message. Today, it matters little what a photo contains, as long as it’s pretty. My pictures aren’t pretty. And the crazy thing…
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To Whom It May Concern
Camera toters are a curious lot. I frequently witness fashion-conscious point-and-shooters eye each other’s stylish little cameras and ask each other questions like, “how big is that screen?”, “Is it high-def?”, “is that a touch screen?” and, of course, “does it come in blue?” Similarly, I’ve watched the eyes of SLR shooters as they dart…
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The Eternal Leica M6 TTL (Part 2)
With the bulk of Part 1 spent justifying the use of film cameras in today’s world, Part 2 dishes on all the good, bad, and curious attributes of the Leica M6 TTL and why, maybe, you should consider adding a film camera to your own bag o’ tricks.
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The Eternal Leica M6 TTL (Part 1)
To take a photo with the Leica M6 TTL is to take a trip 50 years into the historical glory days of photography — when men were men, women were women, and both could actually take photographs without aid of a computer. This, the first of a two-part article, discusses the relevancy of a fully…
