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I am talking about professional photographers.I'd argue that the Rolleiflex is a superb camera for portraiture even today and 100 years from now. The sequence of pressing the shutter then winding the very smooth mechanism is very satisfying in the way a Hasselblad can not be.
There is no rule that says you have to finish a roll before removing it. In the end, film is cheap.
There is no rule that says you have to finish a roll before removing it. In the end, film is cheap.
not any longer
Ok, lets talk facts.
Here a roll of XP2 120mm is about 12 EUR.
At 6x6, one snap is 1 EUR.
If I decide to give up 3 remaining shots at the end of a roll, I throw away 3 EUR.
Is that really a "thing" to worry about?
It all depends on how patient you are, how important the images already taken may be and how you value your images and your time. I often find that random images taken to finish off the roll are among the best. But if there is an image I have a burning desire to see and print, I will willingly throw away part of a roll of film. Anyone counting pennies and shooting film is on a fool's errand anyway.Ok, lets talk facts.
Here a roll of XP2 120mm is about 12 EUR.
At 6x6, one snap is 1 EUR.
If I decide to give up 3 remaining shots at the end of a roll, I throw away 3 EUR.
Is that really a "thing" to worry about?
I'd argue that the Rolleiflex is a superb camera for portraiture even today and 100 years from now. The sequence of pressing the shutter then winding the very smooth mechanism is very satisfying in the way a Hasselblad can not be.
I loved my Rollei 3003 which was a 35mm SLR with interchangeable backs. Used one for color transparency and the other for B&W.
I sold it a while ago. Have been sorry ever since.Still working?
Ok, lets talk facts.
Here a roll of XP2 120mm is about 12 EUR.
At 6x6, one snap is 1 EUR.
If I decide to give up 3 remaining shots at the end of a roll, I throw away 3 EUR.
Is that really a "thing" to worry about?
It all depends on how patient you are, how important the images already taken may be and how you value your images and your time. I often find that random images taken to finish off the roll are among the best. But if there is an image I have a burning desire to see and print, I will willingly throw away part of a roll of film. Anyone counting pennies and shooting film is on a fool's errand anyway.
Ansel M - I'd hardly call film the smallest part of the cost equation anymore. Let's see - 8X10 color film at around $50 a sheet with processing. Just two ten sheet boxes equate to a thousand dollars - more than I paid for my 8x10 camera itself. Bracketing ???? - Even with TMY400 X10 ??!!!&*E^(*&(? You can still find good light meters which cost less than that habit.
I thought we are talking MF roll film here. 12 shots in 6x6 are about 1 EUR each. So a 0.5l can of mass market beer then.
Let's go back to the original topic of the thread.
I thought we are talking MF roll film here. 12 shots in 6x6 are about 1 EUR each. So a 0.5l can of mass market beer then.
Let's go back to the original topic of the thread.
The original topic is whether or not anyone finds much use for interchangeable backs on a medium format camera - not about film at all. The conversation has moved on.
Though cost of sheet film in a MF only topic isn't relevant to the thread.
The conversation has moved on.
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