I know you had several LX's (maybe still have them). I wonder if you ever shot weddings with them and if so, how the experience compared to using the latest and greatest from Pentax...
-- Best regards, Bruce Saturday, June 7, 2008, 5:41:15 PM, you wrote: WR> Normally, I don't do weddings. Lyndsaye is a favourite model though, and a really sweet kid. WR> So, I ended up shooting her wedding. WR> Some nice things about the K20: WR> It has a PC socket, so I was able to use my old Metz 60CT-2 with a PC cord rather than one of WR> those goofy shoe adaptors. WR> The Metz has the most accurate auto flash control I have ever WR> seen, which is why I have been so WR> dissapointed with the TTL stuff for the past few years. WR> I had both the K10 and K20 on hand, so I mounted the k10 onto a WR> tripod with the A*85/1.4 (I love WR> being able to say that) attached, and used it for the back of the church pictures. WR> What a swell lens it is. WR> I used the 31mm for everything else at the church, and then the Nokton 58mm f/1.4 for the WR> portraits. There is another swell lens, let me tell you. And the Kaze Eye screen made manual WR> focusing realy nice and easy too. WR> One thing I noticed, and it is very annoying, is how easily the WR> control wheels get knocked while WR> shooting. I was hoping the user mode would fix that, but WR> unfortunately it doesn't address basic WR> exposure settings. So, I got used to checking the settings often, and did have a few botched WR> exposures because I had bumped a wheel. WR> Overall though, the cameras did really well for me. WR> William Robb -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

