I'm new to large format. I have a Chamonix 45H-1 4x5. The fresnel I believe is between the GG and my eye. How do you differentiate that you're focusing on the ground side of the GG and not the wrong side of the GG focusing on the fresnel?
You point the camera at a light source, take off the lens, put the loupe on the fresnel and focus the loupe till the grain of the gg is sharp. Your loupe is then focused on the film plane.I'm new to large format. I have a Chamonix 45H-1 4x5. The fresnel I believe is between the GG and my eye. How do you differentiate that you're focusing on the ground side of the GG and not the wrong side of the GG focusing on the fresnel?
I'm new to large format. I have a Chamonix 45H-1 4x5. The fresnel I believe is between the GG and my eye. How do you differentiate that you're focusing on the ground side of the GG and not the wrong side of the GG focusing on the fresnel?
Magnifying glasses are great for general viewing of the ground glass, but I'd recommend a loupe for fine focusing as well.
Get the right diopter reading glasses that enable you to focus on the ground glass (or anything else, for that matter) at a comfortable distance. Too weak and you'll be too far away from the gg; too strong and you'll be too close. If you wear glasses that correct for astigmatism, reading glasses may not be ideal. I use clip on magnifying glasses over my regular glasses (I like 3+ diopters, BYMMV). Mine come from Cabelas and are intended for fly fisherman with bad eyes; just flip them down and you can see to tie that fly on to your leader; flip them up and you have your normal, corrected vision.
In addition to the magnifying glasses, you should use a loupe for the fine focus. I like 6-8X loupes, like Drew. However, contrary to many, I use a free-floating loupe, really just a small 6x magnifying glass, that doesn't touch the ground glass. Yes, I have to move around to make sure I'm focused on the ground side of the ground glass and not on the Fresnel lines, but I don't find that difficult. The upside is that I can change the angle of the loupe to the ground glass to be able to see into the corners and find the sweet spot when I'm using lots of movements; things a fixed-length skirted loupe can't do.
Note: you don't have to remove your glasses or your readers/magnifying glasses when using the loupe as long as you can adjust it to focus sharply with them on (a non-issue with a floating loupe; you just move it closer to/farther from your eye).
Hope this helps,
Doremus
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