brent8927
Member
My wife and I have a little one on the way. We have a point and shoot as well as iPhones that if needed can be used for those absolute spur of the moment photo ops. For the most part my wife would be taking those photos.
I want to continue taking 6x6 B&W photos until I die. I'd like to produce some timeless (and I'm sure at least 10x more useless/blurry) photos as our child grows up.
For the last 15 years all I have used is a Hasselblad, and for 13 of those years all I used was an 80mm lens with it. It can be slow for me to take photos of my wife even when she poses for me. This has me worried about when our baby starts running around. I realize any manual focus camera will be difficult/slow, but I would like to avoid a DSLR (or equivalent) at all costs. I'd like a good-quality 6x6 camera to photograph our child. I'm sure for staged photos, continued portraits of my wife, and my nature photography, that the Hasselblad will still be best.
I'm thinking something a little quicker/easier to focus would work better as the kid moves around. I'd like to hear others' opinions. Here is what I'm thinking:
1) Use a quick focusing lever? I've never tried this, but I believe I need to take off the focusing grip, which would make using the camera less enjoyable for most of the shots I take. Maybe I just put it on the 120mm? I'm not sure if the focusing grip needs to be removed in that case (I don't know for sure--it's just such a large grip it would seem odd to remove it).
2) Buy an 80 CFI as it focuses much smoother than a CF lens. Or a 100mm?
3) Look into a Rolleiflex TLR. We used to have a Rolleicord and I felt it focused pretty quickly.
Preference would be to adapt the Hasselblad to work faster. I want to keep shooting WLF 6x6. I get a prism would be faster, but it ruins the enjoyment for me. I want to enjoy taking photos of my kids as much (if not more) than getting a higher rate of in-focus/quality photos. I know maybe those priorities seem backwards, but I'm a believer that sometimes the fewer photos you have, the more special and unique they are, and the better they bring back memories. Hence a primary reason I still shoot film when all my friends shoot digital.
I want to continue taking 6x6 B&W photos until I die. I'd like to produce some timeless (and I'm sure at least 10x more useless/blurry) photos as our child grows up.
For the last 15 years all I have used is a Hasselblad, and for 13 of those years all I used was an 80mm lens with it. It can be slow for me to take photos of my wife even when she poses for me. This has me worried about when our baby starts running around. I realize any manual focus camera will be difficult/slow, but I would like to avoid a DSLR (or equivalent) at all costs. I'd like a good-quality 6x6 camera to photograph our child. I'm sure for staged photos, continued portraits of my wife, and my nature photography, that the Hasselblad will still be best.
I'm thinking something a little quicker/easier to focus would work better as the kid moves around. I'd like to hear others' opinions. Here is what I'm thinking:
1) Use a quick focusing lever? I've never tried this, but I believe I need to take off the focusing grip, which would make using the camera less enjoyable for most of the shots I take. Maybe I just put it on the 120mm? I'm not sure if the focusing grip needs to be removed in that case (I don't know for sure--it's just such a large grip it would seem odd to remove it).
2) Buy an 80 CFI as it focuses much smoother than a CF lens. Or a 100mm?
3) Look into a Rolleiflex TLR. We used to have a Rolleicord and I felt it focused pretty quickly.
Preference would be to adapt the Hasselblad to work faster. I want to keep shooting WLF 6x6. I get a prism would be faster, but it ruins the enjoyment for me. I want to enjoy taking photos of my kids as much (if not more) than getting a higher rate of in-focus/quality photos. I know maybe those priorities seem backwards, but I'm a believer that sometimes the fewer photos you have, the more special and unique they are, and the better they bring back memories. Hence a primary reason I still shoot film when all my friends shoot digital.