eli griggs
Member
As far as filters buy step up/ step down threaded filter adapters to each Bay size and some bay adapters to bay filters, slowing you to use what you've got.
I have a C, in 150mm C t* in 150mm and, 50mm, CF, in 80mm and 150 mm, plus the 180 CFi and the 250 CFi and I love them all.
(The first two 150s were bought to have spare parts and practice lens CLA/Repairs), and I do make portraits.
I look at the 500 Series camera's AND lenses as being slow to operate, at least in the begining of the relationship, so you can adopt the modular box system into a modular approach to setting up and taking a quality image, with quality tools.
Just as you decide the lens, viewfinder, magazine and film, screen, tripod, monopod or none, and the lens hood, hard shell or pro-shade, you must also chose, filters, shutter release type, time and aperture, etc.
This deliberate way of working does no suffer, if done correctly, from the use of older lenses, that require separating speed and aperture rings and no every shot requires multi-coated lenses, and the change to later built lenses work just as well in the same bag, with the Elder Generations.
If you've good glass and shutter, changing to latter kit is no priority to worry about and, if you happen to have the newest and shiniest kit, you won't be slumming or letting the end down by trying the Elder lenses, say for example to see if the 60mm or 500mm are really tools you'll want and use, before dropping a large part of your camera budget on the newer stuff.
In the end, I don't believe I've ever heard a photographer complaining that because his/her Hasselblad wore the older version of a focal length, that they 'missed' the shot.
Think about it.
IMO.
I have a C, in 150mm C t* in 150mm and, 50mm, CF, in 80mm and 150 mm, plus the 180 CFi and the 250 CFi and I love them all.
(The first two 150s were bought to have spare parts and practice lens CLA/Repairs), and I do make portraits.
I look at the 500 Series camera's AND lenses as being slow to operate, at least in the begining of the relationship, so you can adopt the modular box system into a modular approach to setting up and taking a quality image, with quality tools.
Just as you decide the lens, viewfinder, magazine and film, screen, tripod, monopod or none, and the lens hood, hard shell or pro-shade, you must also chose, filters, shutter release type, time and aperture, etc.
This deliberate way of working does no suffer, if done correctly, from the use of older lenses, that require separating speed and aperture rings and no every shot requires multi-coated lenses, and the change to later built lenses work just as well in the same bag, with the Elder Generations.
If you've good glass and shutter, changing to latter kit is no priority to worry about and, if you happen to have the newest and shiniest kit, you won't be slumming or letting the end down by trying the Elder lenses, say for example to see if the 60mm or 500mm are really tools you'll want and use, before dropping a large part of your camera budget on the newer stuff.
In the end, I don't believe I've ever heard a photographer complaining that because his/her Hasselblad wore the older version of a focal length, that they 'missed' the shot.
Think about it.
IMO.
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