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Feeding my GAS

At one point or another, we all fall victim to the notorious GAS, or the so-called Gear Acquisition Syndrome. To be honest, I was actually quite proud of the fact that I went through a bit of a down-sizing first. I went from a dSLR and a bunch of useless lens options, to only a few items of real high quality. That only lasted so long, before I became so mesmerized by the magical-looking Bokeh classic Meyer-Optik-Goerlitz lens made. At the first opportunity, I jumped onto the Indiegogo bandwagon, and pledged into the 1.9/75 lens. Like anybody who’s too eager and excited to even read the big print, I completely missed the fact that although the lens will come in M-Mount, but will not have rangefinder coupling. Say what? Of course, my M Typ 262 is so basic, that it doesn’t even support an external EVF. Now what? I guess I can still mount it onto my little E-M10, and use it as a 150 mm lens, but that defeats the purpose a little. For certain applications, the lack of rangefinder coupli

Steady, Ready, Go

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Sometimes, it's difficult to remember the basics. Case and point, I've always thought the 90 mm f/2 lens is so difficult to use, that most of them become out of focus simply because of focus-recompose. But it turns out, I was so deep down the "difficult to use" rabbit hole, I consistently forgot to check my shutter speed under less-than-optimal lighting. A simple rule of thumb (I don't have stabilization anywhere on the camera) states that the shutter speed should be the inverse of the focal length. Sometimes it may pay well to bump up the ISO and accept a slightly more noisy image, than a blurry one. In all fairness, my Leica M isn't the best performer in the dark, but at ISO 3200, it still isn't bad at all.  Lighting isn't bad at all, but I forgot to change ISO from 3200 Shutter speed was ample fast for me to nail the focus on the eyes -- The weather finally stopped sucking last weekend, and I finally drove my couch-potato-ass out of my ap

Where has the time gone

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At some point, I remembered starting to rejoin the workforce, and all of a sudden, here I am, with my blog completely neglected, and myself being no better financially than Day 1 at work. Nothing is as easy as you think of it before you really get into it. Anyway. I did have some chances to take pictures with my beloved Leica, although they were few and far between. I’ve also partly switched from trains to my new cat. She’s the most adorable thing. Oh, and I traded my APS-C sized Canon in for a Micro 4/3 Olympus mirrorless, so I can effectively double the focal lengths of my M-Mount lenses. That’s the direction I’ll go, I think. I might get one actual MFT lens at some point just so I have auto-focus when I need it, but otherwise, it will be aperture dials and manual focus all the way. Heavy Instagram filter applied, shot in Montreal with the good ole 2.0/90 wide open on the Leica M Forgot what lens, shot at wide open, with the Olympus (thank heavens for focus peaking), in

Two Years Later

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This funny feeling of being asleep for two years keeps on coming back from time to time, but there has been progress, after all. Now I can use Presto (Greater Toronto's version of the Oyster Card) on all buses and at all subway stations. The new GO Transit cab cars have already become a new norm, and so are the new streetcars around downtown Toronto. The airport train still runs, and now costs significantly less. However, the construction is still neverending at Union Station, and overall, public transportation is still kind of a joke. I would've liked to buy the pancake lens for my Leica M from Voigtländer, the 2.5/35 Color-Skopar that has been raved about online, especially for its moderate price (I wanted something "cheap", so I can save up for, say, a Summilux, later). But being in Canada, the land of being mostly ignored and super slow delivery, the one store I knew sold them no longer had them in store. I ended up purchasing my first Carl Zeiss lens, the 2.8/3

Ouch, it's just more than few minutes late this time

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I pulled an ICE, I know. The last month had been a little hectic. I had to move twice in a span of about 2 weeks, and now I'm getting ready for another move in another 2 weeks. It was bittersweet to say goodbye to my carefree grad student lifestyle in Europe, but I had to face reality again sooner or later. The first morning I woke up in Ontario, again, the last two years felt like a long dream. If it wasn't for the new contacts on my phone, the blog posts, my new camera, and my new degree, maybe the whole Germany thing really didn't happen at all. Two days ago, I finally had my first chance to test out the Leica on foreign soil. The weather didn't cooperate, but I was lucky enough to see a few trains in a span of just 90 minutes. Via Rail's P42s had a new paint job to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the country, but they looked like they were never sandblasted and was just painted over (those spots on the nose where paint used to chip off). So here they ar

Sometimes you get lucky, and find out about stuff

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At some point in time, long enough after I have arrived in Germany, S-Bahn Rhein Ruhr brought some old rollingstocks back onto the S1 Line, citing technical considerations. What's curious about this change was that the vintage trains ( Class 420 EMUs or Eastern German locomotive-hauled trains with the x-Wagen on the tail-end) did not run the entire route. In fact, the S1 was cut into two portions, one from Dortmund Hbf to Bochum Hbf (later to Essen-Steele Ost) which utilized older equipment exclusively, the other from Bochum Hbf to Solingen Hbf, and only had the newer Class 422 trains. I don't suppose the majority of the passengers that frequent this route had been greatly affected, thanks to the numerous Regional Bahn and Regional Express trains that stop at the major stations between Dortmund and Solingen, but it felt weird to me. I mean, after all, once a railroader, always a railroader. Class 422 on the left, and the older train got cut off by me... Given all the

Testing out the fancy new SD Card

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It's 2017, and I've finally bought a SD Card that's fast enough for low-compression 1080p video recording! A few years too late, but I had to test it out with my 70D. It's still a very good camera for what I use it for anyway, and it does 1080p recording at 30 fps (doesn't even sound as impressive as the iPhone, I know, but meh). So with my little Gorillapod, I set up shop at Düsseldorf Airport and Düsseldorf Benrath yesterday. Here are the results after some basic editing with iMovie. Maybe when the money situation gets better, I'll get myself a nice microphone and tripod and explore some of this video stuff a little more. I don't expect huge results, knowing the limit of my creativity, but hey, this stuff is kind of fun.