As someone who's used to using a Mamiya 7II rangefinder for landscape photography I've found it a struggle to get to grips with a Toyo 45A for the past several months. I've got so I can manage the movements now and in normal lighting conditions everything's fine and I'm feeling quite confident, to the point where I'm using it more than the Mamiya.
However, and it's a big however, most of my landscape work is carried out at dawn. I usually arrive before dawn and spend some time getting my composition spot on in very low light. With the Mamiya and a 50mm lens this is a piece of cake since I use the big, bright external finder and simply focus at the hyperfocal distance. With the Toyo it seems it's nearly impossible to work in this way. The Toyo has a fresnel screen but this doesn't seem to be enough in these circumstances and the fresnel pattern actually makes focusing more difficult.
Having just come back from two weeks holiday where I tried several dawn shots, I'm disappointed to find that several of them have items in the darker foreground and around the edges of the frame, where the focusing screen is at its dimmest, that I simply didn't want included.
Is there an answer? My lenses are all Schneiders (65, 90 and 150) with maximum apertures of f/5.6 and f/8 (the f/8 is noticeably less easy to compose at dawn as you'd expect). I use a good quality dark cloth but do find that I struggle to get edge-to-edge coverage using my Ohnar lupe which isn't deep enough to clear the screen shade on the Toyo which makes it awkward to use.
Any suggestions would be much appreciated.
Barry
However, and it's a big however, most of my landscape work is carried out at dawn. I usually arrive before dawn and spend some time getting my composition spot on in very low light. With the Mamiya and a 50mm lens this is a piece of cake since I use the big, bright external finder and simply focus at the hyperfocal distance. With the Toyo it seems it's nearly impossible to work in this way. The Toyo has a fresnel screen but this doesn't seem to be enough in these circumstances and the fresnel pattern actually makes focusing more difficult.
Having just come back from two weeks holiday where I tried several dawn shots, I'm disappointed to find that several of them have items in the darker foreground and around the edges of the frame, where the focusing screen is at its dimmest, that I simply didn't want included.
Is there an answer? My lenses are all Schneiders (65, 90 and 150) with maximum apertures of f/5.6 and f/8 (the f/8 is noticeably less easy to compose at dawn as you'd expect). I use a good quality dark cloth but do find that I struggle to get edge-to-edge coverage using my Ohnar lupe which isn't deep enough to clear the screen shade on the Toyo which makes it awkward to use.
Any suggestions would be much appreciated.
Barry