All quite possible! But it’s also about possessing something that’s as rare as hen’s teeth.Why not just install a mask over a regular A12 back? Or, even easier and maybe better, install the mask on your viewing screen and crop in the finder, and then again on the negatives when printing or scanning.
Yes, of course you can make a vertical image from a cropped square, but there's something about a vertical rectangle that seems desirable.
I think you are forgetting about the circle.I cannot image what would be desirable about a vertical rectangle when we all know that square is the perfect format.
Perhaps this is why they are so rare!I still can't see the practical value in this back. You can easily crop 6 by 6 2 or 6x45 vertical. And you don't get four extra exposure like you do with the 645 hasselblad back.
I think you are forgetting about the circle.
When I mount a to ‘short’ focal or go to far in the mouvements on my optical bench camera...Really?? How often do you see a circular frame? When was the last time?
Sirius, once in awhile I see a circle within a 35mm frame when someone used one of the older fisheye lenses. These may have been called circular fisheye lenses. I recall a Nikon 220 degree lens in the Ai era - staggeringly expensive. I am not sure how practical they were, but they existed.Really?? How often do you see a circular frame? When was the last time?
Well, you will have all that unexposed film space either side of the frame for notes and those whatifs: what if composed to the left a bit, what if composed to the right a bit ... etc.Mother nature talking to you through this set up, allowing to hope that image could have been better, just your framing wound up being a complete mess ... possibly.I still can't see the practical value in this back. You can easily crop 6 by 6 2 or 6x45 vertical. And you don't get four extra exposure like you do with the 645 hasselblad back.
Square may be a very good choice for MF image on film, but somewhat too balanced for dynamic composition. Square is essentially static. The square’s strength lies in the ability to crop in order to establish a stronger frame. There are times when square serves a purpose. Same can be said about circular and oval frames. In this respect, MF has advantage over smaller formats because more negative can be sacrificed and still retain a superior final photograph. 35mm requires greater attention to make whole negative count. Very little cropping possible with Minox.
Sirius, once in awhile I see a circle within a 35mm frame when someone used one of the older fisheye lenses. These may have been called circular fisheye lenses. I recall a Nikon 220 degree lens in the Ai era - staggeringly expensive. I am not sure how practical they were, but they existed.
Sounds completely backwards. Square can have a lot of strengths and shooting it to crop is not ECO friendly either, all that silver dumped for nothing ... and likely not recovered.Square may be a very good choice for MF image on film, but somewhat too balanced for dynamic composition. Square is essentially static. The square’s strength lies in the ability to crop in order to establish a stronger frame. There are times when square serves a purpose. Same can be said about circular and oval frames. In this respect, MF has advantage over smaller formats because more negative can be sacrificed and still retain a superior final photograph. 35mm requires greater attention to make whole negative count. Very little cropping possible with Minox.
It may simply be because there is no need to change anything in a standard 6x6 back except the film gate and the label on the back - no difference in winding or in the frame counter.why design it for reduced exposure count?
I don't think it was possible to take same length roll of film and increase shots with vertical being as wide as as square frame. Film still travels the same way.I'm also curious what the typical use-case for such a back would be.
I can see value in a 'vertical 645' back that mounts such that it takes a vertical negative rather than landscape, but why design it for reduced exposure count?
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