It sounds like you have already made up your mind that the RB67 is your most enjoyed camera of the two. For me I fell in love with the Mamiya Universal and then the Super 23 about 25 years ago. I had the opportunity to try the RB67 when it came out. I was never able to get use to the weight and ergonomics of the body at the time and never got interested in it. My current kit is the Super 23 with a full set of lenses and multiple 6x9 backs. I have a 6x7 back but it has never been used as I don't care for the format. I have a lot of spare parts for both the rollfilm holders and the body and lenses so I am set for as long as I will use it. A lot of people always comment on the weight of the Super 23 and I get a chuckle from that because they have never used a 5x7 SuperTechnika with lens hand held weighing in around 13lbs. I have some years on you and the only comment I would have about your choice is to use the camera that you get the most enjoyment from and that sounds like the RB67.
I’ve thought some on this, as I also have both systems. They are very different cameras that excel at very different kinds of shooting. So for me the answer would be about what kind of pictures do you imagine you’ll be taking, and then what compromises you are willing to make.
If I was planning to do a lot of portraiture or close-up work I would pick the RB67. The Universal is capable but its lenses aren’t as fast and checking the ground glass is much slower than the reflex finder for checking DOF.
Turned around; If I was doing slower landscape work, or handheld out and about shooting I would pick the Universal. I find the universal easier to frame with the rangefinder or with ground glass than the RB67, and handheld I find the RB67 a bit of a disaster.
Good points.
My own experience with the Press has been better on a tripod for studied imagery rather than handheld. Putting the big Press body to the eye for street shooting can be intimidating for random subjects with a 100mm or shorter lens. And it’s hard to be circumspect with a 250mm ƒ5.0 lens that’s heavier than the camera body itself, sporting a 105mm front element.
For me, the RB67 with a good carry strap, handle, 127mm lens and the waist finder do well when I can use shutter speeds 1/125 or faster. I prefer a cable release as I tend to be a shutter button jabber. With the waist (sometimes waste-) finder, doing street is a much easier process than operating the big ol’ Press for quick shots.
There I go again, hah?
Until a couple of years ago I was having a similar approach to film shooting. Not patethic, but is resource saving and maximises keepers while you may eventually regretting not taking X, Y, Z picture that at the moment by "editing before camera" but on memory later on you wished you had.I need to sell one or the other. My workflow is a tedious grind, being a rank amateur. I’ll pick something I want to photograph, and wait for the position of the moon, local weather, or whatever to get just what I had visualized. I might take a month to expose a roll of film then develop and scan it. I also have several film backs to switch stock easily. Pathetic.
I'd get hanged in certain circles, but those Leicas are puny 35mm, you anyways get a lot more bang for the buck in MF! OT: Wish that Leica had made a 6x6-6x9 medium format rangefinder... Look at how Mamiya did theirs (M6-7)That said, anyone ever agonize over selling a Leica for a Nikon? Had remorse over the decision later but coped anyway? You’d think a bugshutter with 70 summers on the right side of the turf wouldn’t need advice, but it’s MF, you know?
I have owned and enjoyed both systems and although I am generally no fan of "the rangefinder experience", I prefer the Mamiya Press to the RB67. In the end, I sold all of the medium format gear except for an old folder and some pinholes and opted instead for a 4x5 Crown Graphic with a well calibrated range finder. Once I had the Crown Graphic in hand and used it a little bit, I wondered why the devil would I ever use either the RB67 or Mamiya Press ?
In the same situation, assuming I could afford to do so, I would pack up one system, put it somewhere not too accessible, and use the other system. More than once I have regretted selling a complete camera system. I have never regretted packing up and storing my LTM Leica system (purchased ca. 1965) or my Nikon F system (purchased ca. 1972) as my situation and interests have changed over the years. I am currently using a fairly complete Hasselblad V kit (purchased ca. 2005) but I have no doubt that I will switch back to one or the other of the 35mm systems eventually.
Mamiya Press Super 23 or RB67. Have a great kit for each platform but only need one. All purchased from 100% positive-rated Japanese eBay seller in Mint condition. No haze, fungus, or balsam separations on my optics!
Anyway, I’m torn, want to hear (informed, if available) opinions.
I like the somewhat larger 6x9 Press negative and the more “photographic” image quality of the Press system lenses—almost like a small LF kit. Sort of a gray area between MF & LF. The con for this system is I don’t much care for rangefinders and the beast is utterly non-automatic, with a dozen ways to unintentionally multi-expose or leave frames blank.
I have long loved the utter perfection of the RB67 system and lenses. It’s also a beast but I much prefer the reflex system over rangefinders. Moreover, even with a marginally smaller negative size, the Sekor K/L lenses are beyond perfection; Zeiss doesn’t compare. Images have a three-dimensional quality no other system, analog or digital can match. Almost too perfect! The con is weight and difficulty in field use over the Super 23.
I need to sell one or the other. My workflow is a tedious grind, being a rank amateur. I’ll pick something I want to photograph, and wait for the position of the moon, local weather, or whatever to get just what I had visualized. I might take a month to expose a roll of film then develop and scan it. I also have several film backs to switch stock easily. Pathetic.
That said, anyone ever agonize over selling a Leica for a Nikon? Had remorse over the decision later but coped anyway? You’d think a bugshutter with 70 summers on the right side of the turf wouldn’t need advice, but it’s MF, you know?
Your comments are appreciated!
Cogito ergo Bebop a Lula
Perhaps the answer is to acquire (I can hear her indoors moan: 'Not more junk!) a clip-on or slip-in rangefinder such as a Photopia.
I have a somewhat eclectic camera rack as far as LF/MF is concerned: c1956 Pacemaker Speed Graphic 5x4, c1925 Thornton Pickard Junior Special reflex, c1970s Mamiya Press, 3 VN folding strut 6x9 (all full working condition and really the forerunner of the 23 and Press designs), Mamiya RB67 with 6x6, 6x7 and 6x9 backs. Also, Mami C330S, Bronicas in focal plane and lens shutter models, and 'Blad 503CX and ELM bodies. The VNs were very much the Pressman's go-to tool. They were simple,very reliable, and had no focussing aids other than the wire viewfinder. The standard lens was superb and images fabulous. They were particularly popular for sport, particularly soccer. They were the standard kit when I started work on my first paper in 1959 and remained in use throughout the industry well into the 1960s. The Mamiya 23/Press was widely adopted by VN users as it was quick in use with the sports finder.
The VN was a folding strut camera which was a popular form of plate camera which started off in the early 1900's with the Goerz company in Germany. They became widely used throughout Europe by news photographers, but when the First World War prevented their sale in many parts of Europe, including the UK, a British optical and photographic company formed in the 1890's called Peeling and Van Neck adapted the design to their own folding strut model, the first of which came to market in around 1917. The 9x12 cm format was a popular one, and although the VN Press had only a wire frame viewer and no rangefinder, soon became de rigeur in the newsrooms of British newspapers, as well as Continental ones. Despite the dislike of anything British by the US outfits, VNs were used by some American papers, particularly when used with roll film backs. They were lighter and faster to use than Graflex baseboard types. In Europe, they remained in service up to the mid-1960s with their natural successor the Mamiya 23 or Press.A dumb question: what's a VN ? I imagine a camera brand common in the UK, and less so in the US. In the US, press photographers (I mean local press, not war correspondents) likely used Graphics well into the 1950s and perhaps even early 1960s, eventually being supplanted by TLRs, occasional MF RFs like Graflex XL and Mamiya Press in the 1960s, and then 35mm SLRs. This has been discussed elsewhere more accurately than I could present.
Many people have strong feelings about RF and SLR for one reason or another. I got a Mamiya Press system in the mid-late 1990s in part because it seemed the only MF system I could afford at the time. It is indeed bulky. I never have tried to use a 250mm lens for it. However, one feeling I have about MF TLRs and rangefinders is that you may be able to get away with a smaller tripod than for an MF SLR, which can reduce the weight/bulk of the entire kit by a lot. It is nice to look through an SLR. The RB67 is almost the extreme pole of MF SLR bulk among common systems, though (okay, there is probably something bigger, but rarer, like a Makiflex).
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?