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Help re choosing Leica


pd100

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I'd like a top-quality camera to take high-quality pictures of my art (paintings mainly). It would also be good if the camera could be used for other creative use. 

 

I'd like a digital camera. I was thinking between the S and the M.

 

I'm thinking of trading in my (LHSA black-paint) M6TTL and accessories.

 

I'd be grateful if some kindly, knolwedgeable soul could help.

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I'd like a top-quality camera to take high-quality pictures of my art (paintings mainly). It would also be good if the camera could be used for other creative use. 

 

I'd like a digital camera. I was thinking between the S and the M.

 

I'm thinking of trading in my (LHSA black-paint) M6TTL and accessories.

 

I'd be grateful if some kindly, knolwedgeable soul could help.

For photographing art the S will be a lot better in terms of IQ,and has AF.. it's more money but a great system!

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I'd like a top-quality camera to take high-quality pictures of my art (paintings mainly). It would also be good if the camera could be used for other creative use. 

 

I'd like a digital camera. I was thinking between the S and the M.

 

I'm thinking of trading in my (LHSA black-paint) M6TTL and accessories.

 

I'd be grateful if some kindly, knolwedgeable soul could help.

There was a recent thread about shooting paintings with a Leica S. You can check it for a link to my PDF as to how make an art copy setup. As for cameras, it really depends on your final intent. If you are shooting for the web or a digital portfolio, then you can make nearly any camera work. If you are shooting for high quality reproduction (giclee in American art gallery speak), then you need a high resolution, high bitdepth camera preferably with an apo lens like an S/70. The S series will let you shoot for reproduction with a native resolution yielding a print of 20x30 inches. In practice you can take a file from a S camera and make a very nice 40x60 inch print on canvas. I wouldn't want to take a M file beyond 20x30 for art repro. It can be done but, if your intent is to reproduce your art for sale then the S is the better tool. Of course if the M is your choice, you will need the electronic viewfinder.

 

Here is the link to that PDF http://www.kauaisprintmaker.com/how-to-print-the-perfect-giclee.php

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There was a recent thread about shooting paintings with a Leica S. You can check it for a link to my PDF as to how make an art copy setup. As for cameras, it really depends on your final intent. If you are shooting for the web or a digital portfolio, then you can make nearly any camera work. If you are shooting for high quality reproduction (giclee in American art gallery speak), then you need a high resolution, high bitdepth camera preferably with an apo lens like an S/70. The S series will let you shoot for reproduction with a native resolution yielding a print of 20x30 inches. In practice you can take a file from a S camera and make a very nice 40x60 inch print on canvas. I wouldn't want to take a M file beyond 20x30 for art repro. It can be done but, if your intent is to reproduce your art for sale then the S is the better tool. Of course if the M is your choice, you will need the electronic viewfinder.

 

Here is the link to that PDF http://www.kauaisprintmaker.com/how-to-print-the-perfect-giclee.php

Only the 120 and 180 are APO....  otherwise sounds like good advice.

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Only the 120 and 180 are APO....  otherwise sounds like good advice.

I read somewhere that the 70 Summarit, like the 50 ASPH Summilux, is an APO lens. I looked but couldn't find that reference. My bad. Still, this lens is great for art repo.

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I read somewhere that the 70 Summarit, like the 50 ASPH Summilux, is an APO lens. I looked but couldn't find that reference. My bad. Still, this lens is great for art repo.

its a great sense,under tough circumstances it will show CS.. Like dark branches against a bright sky but its an excellent performer and sharp to the edges..definitely great for repo..

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I read somewhere that the 70 Summarit, like the 50 ASPH Summilux, is an APO lens. I looked but couldn't find that reference. My bad. Still, this lens is great for art repo.

The 50 lux is not apo,its aspherical but only the 50mm summicron is APO and its super expensive(although quite amazing )

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