The one thing I am clear about is that I love taking pictures, I love seeing the world around me and I love looking at it through a lens. And I always, always have a camera with me.
Fuji X100s 2.0s @f4, ISO 500 ~ Bell Town in Seattle, Washington photographed through a hotel room window |
So when the camera manufactures began producing the micro four thirds lines and the mirror-less lines I got excited about the possibilities and didn't hesitate. I jumped right in. I started out with the very first Panasonic micro four thirds right after it came out and graduated over the next couple of years, through a variety of other cameras, to the Olympus OMD EM5, which I still have and like very much (especially with the Olympus 45/1.8 lens attached). But even with the fine EM5 I found myself carting around a bag and lenses, albeit small ones, and that still just wasn't what I was looking for. Simpler, easier, more convenient, great IQ and no bag of lenses, that's what I wanted.
In 1969 when I first got interested in photography SLR's were just coming into their own and rangefinder style cameras were on the way out, more or less. I shot with a Canon Canonet QL17 with a fixed 40mm f1.7 lens. It was with that camera that I learned to see the world around me with photographic eyes. No zooms, no interchangeable lenses.
In 1969 when I first got interested in photography SLR's were just coming into their own and rangefinder style cameras were on the way out, more or less. I shot with a Canon Canonet QL17 with a fixed 40mm f1.7 lens. It was with that camera that I learned to see the world around me with photographic eyes. No zooms, no interchangeable lenses.
So it's been a long journey to end up right where I started with almost identical cameras and fewer choices to make that get in between me and what I want to photograph and I've never been happier. A happy snapshooter grabbing shots of the stuff I see around me everyday, everywhere. And, maybe, some of the best news is what my wife said; "You don't look like a photographer, you just look like a tourist". Yes! I love being a tourist.
Here are a few more shots: One from a day trip up to Port Townsend, Washington a couple of days ago with my good friend Mark for lunch and few snapshots. The other from last weekend in Seattle, Washington to see Bruce Cockburn.
Electric Port Townsend, Washington This bicycle is electrically operated and the gentlemen with the gracious smile having lunch is the owner. Fuji X100s 1/125s @f5.6 ISO 200 |
Bruce Cockburn at Neptune Theater in Seattle, Washington. I didn't have good seats so this is cropped way tight to get this NO flash shot. Fuji X100s 1/30s @f4 ISO 500 |
Tom
What a great perspective on photography and gear.
ReplyDeleteIt seems you and I have similar paths in photography.
Thanks for sharing.
Reed
My Blog: DMC-365.blogspot.com
Thank you Reed. I've been reading your DMC-365 blog for a while now and always enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteAmazing the similarities in the QL17 and the new X100s. I know you put a lot of thought into this camera and think you made a solid discussion. It compliments your style in a number of ways.
ReplyDeleteTom great post. I have been looking at the Fuji X100S and know that I will get one soon. I had the same thoughts as you as my first 35mm camera was the Canon Canonet 28 and then the QL17. I loved those cameras. Thanks for the post.
ReplyDeleteNice to see another x100 user who likes Bruce Cockburn! :-) Love your B & Ws. What settings/mode was the camera on and what did your process them with? I assume they are not SOC jpegs.
ReplyDeleteHello and thanks for reading. I've been following Bruce Cockburn since the 70's, a great artist. Thanks for the nice words on my B&W's too. I shoot Raw+Fine and as you know the Fuji line of cameras are very capable of producing usable images soc. But there are always those times when we just need a little more "head-room" to make critical adjustments so Raw is usually how I shoot and frequently the Raw files are the ones I end up editing. I think I have all the camera settings showing below each photo with the only information missing being that they were all shot in Aperture mode, Raw+fine and all my editing was done in Lightroom 5.
DeleteThanks again for the note.
Tom