I am curious about the camera too. My questions are: Is the Range finder easy to use and is it accurate? Is the reportedly high contrast lens overly so? Is it manageable with proper film processing?
Dennis
Patrick, been seeing your work with it since you appeared around here (and in a couple other places such as IG). You do great with the Fujis (and the RZ)! Was that handheld with Portra 400-800? When I'm going back home I think that I'll use it much more though more tripod oriented.SUPER accurate, as far as my experience goes.
Contrast, to me, is an avantage. Here are a few recent shots from my II:
Hi I just purchased this camera and have been unable to find where to set the film ISO if no setting is needed then what film ISO rating should I use it with?
I am curious about the camera too. My questions are: Is the Range finder easy to use and is it accurate? Is the reportedly high contrast lens overly so? Is it manageable with proper film processing?
Dennis
Patrick, been seeing your work with it since you appeared around here (and in a couple other places such as IG). You do great with the Fujis (and the RZ)! Was that handheld with Portra 400-800? When I'm going back home I think that I'll use it much more though more tripod oriented.
Because I'm a few months for student exchange, and left it at home together with the tripod. Sometimes I do regret.
Mine is slightly out of whack horizontally at infinity; seemingly non-linearly, as it is accurate for closer distances (3m-1m).
The lens is great, some people complain that it's not THAT sharp -compared to Mamiya 7 & Hasselblad level-. I guess because it relates more to a LF than a MF-35mm lens) but to my capability it's exceedingly good.
And shooting Portra-400H rating at lower EI, scanning at a lab with wedding photography clientelle, the contrast and colors go soft and pastel.
In my limited use of the camera, I found the pluses were what most folks here are saying- big negative, easy to focus. There were some downsides and some quirks. The biggest quirk, to me, is using shutter speeds longer than 1 second. To do so, you have to put the shutter on B, no big deal, but you have to re-trigger the shutter by changing the shutter speed to close it. The downsides, to me, are the bulk (this is not a compact camera by any stretch of the imagination), the limited close-focus (I think it's something like 4 feet, which is not a big deal when shooting landscapes, but is a problem when trying to do portraits and/or architectural details), and the sound of the shutter. It's high-pitched and metallic, and surprisingly loud for a leaf shutter. Granted it's no RB67 with the Ker-PHLOP! its mirror makes when you shoot.
I found the lens to be bitingly sharp, almost too sharp, and VERY contrasty, with a color rendition that was not pleasing to me. It was not the camera for me, but it certainly will work very well for other folks.
Thank you macfred. I'd like to get a polarizing filter for it and I hear some cameras require a circular & some others a linear type. Do you have an idea as to what type is best for this all manual camera?
Thank you!
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