The new kid
June 26, 2010
On Friday I folded and joined the 21st century. My latest compact camera is a Canon Ixus 100 15, which is a model or two shy of the latest available, and it's a honey - very small, not too many features and a simple interface.Behind the Canon are the two 35mm compacts I've been travelling with - my beloved Olympus XA and my Rollei 35T, which is a more complex relationship. The Rollei is really a small (imitation) Leica, with a louder, less satisfying shutter but it's too bulky to carry around conveniently, especially with the current fashion for narrow jeans and slim jackets. The XA's a honey: fully auto, smoother around the edges, lovely lens, quiet, thumb wheel film advance. Back home in storage are my Minox 35GT and my Olympus Pen half-frame (along with my Nikon FE). The Pen has the best lens of the four compacts and its rudimentary functions (all manual, no meter, no rangefinder) have forced me to take some great photos: set the exposure according to the grid that used to feature on the inside of a 35mm film packet; set the distance - 6' on the click wheel, easily estimated on the basis of your height; and get in close, paying attention to the light and so on. The shutter is very quiet and its dinky appearance threatens no-one. So, a great portrait camera.
The Minox compact is less fun to use, more fiddly, ugly feel to the shutter, and a tricky lens than can catch the light and distort images. But because it's lighter and smaller I found myself using it more often. This demonstrates another rule: the best camera is the one that you have on you. Which is why I now take so many photos on my phone - and even that's set at low res. (I used it to take the blurry pic above.) Now sharing images has become more of a priority, so I've gone digital. Hello connector cords, battery charging, etc.
Old habits die hard. I'm shooting using the Canon's optical viewfinder with the viewer turned off because I like the accidents of parallax and I don't want to review images while I'm taking them - although nowadays, obviously, the camera is the viewer for most people. The Canon has a 3x optical zoom but I never use it. I am a firm believer in Werner Herzog's adage that if you want to get close, then get close. I switched off the flash - good for parties, but after years of shooting film it seems wrong to use flash for fill during anything approaching daylight. And I racked down the image default from 8mb to 2mb, which gives me a staggering 7,000-odd image capacity on the 4 gig SD card, a faster response. I don't plan to ever print images from this camera - but I'm sure that will change. At full resolution the depth of detail is amazing, and I'm enjoying the different feel of digital. I like it in movies, so it's time to enjoy it in stills.
Old habits die hard. I'm shooting using the Canon's optical viewfinder with the viewer turned off because I like the accidents of parallax and I don't want to review images while I'm taking them - although nowadays, obviously, the camera is the viewer for most people. The Canon has a 3x optical zoom but I never use it. I am a firm believer in Werner Herzog's adage that if you want to get close, then get close. I switched off the flash - good for parties, but after years of shooting film it seems wrong to use flash for fill during anything approaching daylight. And I racked down the image default from 8mb to 2mb, which gives me a staggering 7,000-odd image capacity on the 4 gig SD card, a faster response. I don't plan to ever print images from this camera - but I'm sure that will change. At full resolution the depth of detail is amazing, and I'm enjoying the different feel of digital. I like it in movies, so it's time to enjoy it in stills.
Because I'm in the UK, I will probably be reduced to nerdily carrying around a copy of my rights. The authorities here are hysterical about public photography which has become the new excuse for stopping people and collecting data that will never be analysed or useful. When I was living in East London around the City I would see the same scene four or five times a day: a skinny art student armed with an antique 35mm SLR or a non-English speaking tourist with a video cam standing patiently as a policeman, a trainee policeman or a community policeman took a note of their "details." People do have the right to snap things that are in plain view: buildings, monuments, clouds in the sky. From official UK police statement:
Stop and SearchSection 44 gives officers no specific powers in relation to photography and there is no provision in law for the confiscation of equipment or the destruction of images, either digital or on film.On the rare occasion where an officer suspects that an individual is taking photographs as part of target reconnaissance for terrorist purposes, then they should be treated as a terrorist suspect and dealt with under Section 43 of the Act. This would ensure that the legal power exists to seize equipment and recover images taken. Section 58A Counter Terrorism Act 2008 provides powers to cover instances where photographs are being taken of police officers who are, or who have been, employed at the front line of counter terrorism operations.These scenarios will be exceptionally rare events and do not cover instances of photography by rail enthusiasts, tourists or the media.
However the reality at street level is different. Take photos and you will be stopped and asked patronising questions, usually by someone new to the uniform. (Update: just like this...)


