TracyStorer
Member
For a kit-camera, I think Walnut may be the most forgiving in terms of expense, workability, sustainability, and finishing by the end-user.
My $0.02.
My $0.02.
As an ex woodworker I'm missing Oak on the list
As an ex woodworker I'm missing Oak on the list, one of the most durable wood, its the best wood for many things.
But for a camera maybe I would take Walnut or Ashwood.
Cherrs Armin
Don't know why camera's aren't made of Swiss or European Pear. On the expensive side, but less than rosewood and ebony.
Basically a starter view camera that might allow someone to get their feet wet and decide if they wanted to go bigger or get out.
No way to know until you cut it and try it out. It could be stable or once you start cutting into my warp like crazy. I dont know oregon pine but white pine or "sugar pine" is extremely stabile and has been used to make metal casting patterns for decades. Its not sturdy like mahogany or ebony.
Typos made on a tiny phone...
I owned and used one of the most marvelous cameras ever made for over 25 years. It was a 8x10 Szabad. Made of Ebony and Ironwood in Sweden during the 1960's, it was a all black behemoth with a purpose. The uprights and controls for shift and swing were of a soft finished shiny alloy and very large and prominent. You could easily manipulate it wearing gloves.The front rise and fall were geared and of a blackened brass. They had to be geared because of the weight. A lens package as heavy as a 300mm 4.5 Voightlander Apo-Lanthar in Compur Electronic 5 was too much for a Deardorf or most other wooden or strained metal cameras like my Sinar, hardly phased the Szabad. The locking system was brilliant. It could apply as little or as much tension as you needed. Locked down, was absolute. Nothing moved.
Even though I have no idea what I would do with it now, I really do miss the beast. It was a terrific camera to use and despite its bulk it was very responsive and stronger than almost anything else. With it and my Sinar Norma, and for location work a Horseman 450 and a Technika V, even though I had little awareness of it, I lived in large format bliss.
Production of the camera was voluntarily stopped by Szabad because of South African politics and in support of the efforts of Nelson Mandela and the ANC.
Szilárd Szabad and his cameras http://prittsel.googlepages.com/szilardszabad
Fred
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