Sunday, November 6, 2011

Olympus OM-1


It's a new toy :) While shopping for a fresh bottle of fixer at Calumet (a hopeless quest btw), I noticed they had a couple of new shelves full of old 35mm gear.  The strange part - most of it was reasonably priced (especially for a big name old-school non-online store not named ebay, craigslist, or rangefinderforum.com).  There was the standard Nikon AI/AIS lenses and some old Canon FD stuff, but this little guy stood out from the pack. 

First Impressions
  1. Very small.  I have pretty small hands and this thing just disappears into them.  It's comparable (and probably smaller than) the Nikon FM2n I used to carry around.  
  2. Viewfinder is clean.  By clean I mean uncluttered - besides the analog meter in the lower left corner the viewfinder is completely free from shooting information.  To some this is a bad thing - I'll admit that seeing aperture/shutter info in the VF has its benefits - but sometimes you just want to see the scene without clutter of any kind. 
  3. The On/Off switch is inconvenient at best, straight annoying at worst.  You can see the layout from the birds eye picture above, instead of following almost every other SLR company Olympus decided to put the meter On/Off as a rotating switch that's decoupled from the shutter mechanism.  This is annoying for a couple of reasons - the first is battery drain (inadvertently leaving the switch in the On position will drain the battery).  The second reason is ergonomics - if you're framing with the camera and notice that the meter is off it's almost impossible to reach up with your left hand and switch on the meter without taking your eye from the frame.  
  4. The control layout is different from any other SLR I've used.  The standard configuration is to place the shutter speed on the top plate next to the shutter button and the aperture control on the lens. Olympus decided to buck this trend by putting the shutter speed around the base of the lens mount and the aperture control of the lens around the filter area of the lens.  
  5. The film advance isn't quite as smooth as I'd like it to be.  I've handled damn near every 35mm Nikon, along with a couple of Leica's and the Oly isn't even close - the F3HP just absolutely destroys the OM-1 (and the M3 dual stroke just back from a CLA is just heavenly).    
That's it for first impressions, I'm working my way through a roll of Tri-X so I'll be able to write more on this camera later - hopefully the shutter speeds and meter are accurate (they seem pretty good so far).

Friday, November 4, 2011

The Faces of Occupy Chicago

I recently processed a roll of film from a trip to LaSalle Street in Chicago, which is where the Occupy Chicago folks have set up camp.  I've been shooting events like that with a wide angle (either a 17-35 zoom or a 21mm prime) - it gives me enough depth of field where I don't have to worry about shutter speed or focusing accuracy and allows me to focus more on the content of the shot rather than the mechanics behind it.  Shutter speed - constant. Aperture - constant. Focusing distance - constant at 5-6 ft.  Then it's all a matter of positioning yourself where you want to be and closing the shutter.

I'm out there and for some reason I decide to take out the 90mm Elmarit. It's a great portrait lens (low contrast, kind of flare-y if stray light hits, but a great looking "glow"), but not really your first choice for a cramped-quarters street lens.  It turns out that putting a 90mm lens on naturally turns you into a street portrait guy as opposed to a pure street photographer.  I was mostly setting up in a corner, waiting for someone to come into my field of view and notice me, then hitting the shutter the split second after the deer-in-the-headlights look went away (there's a microsecond where befuddlement turns to puzzlement turns to slight anger turns to acceptance turns to resigned acceptance - it's a great moment to hit).  And that's the moment I think I caught here.  And it planted the idea of a future project (hopefully something I can get done before the Big Cold One hits Chicago) - The Faces of Occupy Chicago.

One of the faces of Occupy Chicago.

Me And My Girl


Leica M3
Jupiter-12 35mm f/2.8 (LTM - Leica threadmount)
Fuji Neopan 400, shot at EI 800
Kodak HC-110 Dilution H (1:63) - 14:30 at 68 degrees

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Sloping

sloping

This is from a recent photowalk with the Chi-togs Facebook group.  This is a group of individuals I met through the Eric Kim street photography workshop.  Eric was back in town for a day so a few of us decided to get together and walk the streets.  This is a great group of guys, I'm reserving some time to blog about them later when I get a chance.

I think we ended up doing more talking than shooting though, as I only ended up with 30-40 shots out of which only a few were good enough to post.  This is one of them, taken during the Halloween festivities in Daley Plaza.  I'm not going to pretend this is a great shot or anything, I do like the angles and slopes of the metal sculpture - I've noticed that I tend to gravitate towards triangles.  Purely unintentional as a matter of fact.

One other notable thing about the photowalk is that I finally shot with all film.  I've tried to balance my film shooting with digital by carrying a Leica along with my D700, this time I took an M3 (w/ Tri-X @ 800) along with an F6 (Acros 100).  The Acros 100 (this shot was taken with it) was a particularly bad choice on an afternoon that was partially cloudy day made worse by the shadows from the Chicago skyline.  Shutter speeds were pretty slow even with a 17-35 2.8, I ended up switching to a 50/1.2.