Ulophot
Member
That's pretty much it, really. I usually place a piece of ground glass (can be improvised in several ways; transparent plastic with some scratches will do, too) on the film plane with the back open and then check focus on near and far/infinity settings. The viewfinder focus should agree with the ground glass/film plane focus. It doesn't require shooting any film. Just the back of the camera open and the shutter on bulb. It helps to set up the camera on a tripod indoors near a window where a distance object (e.g. the horizon) is in view as well as something inside a few feet away (the window frame for instance). No ruler necessary this way.
Thanks, Koraks; much appreciated. It's the kind of thing I would have come up with myself, were I not so, um, challenged when it comes to matters involving measurement or construction. Well, frankly, anything with numbers. Or geometry. Anyway, I'll do this tomorrow wtih some frosted mylar, once I figure out how to keep it flat. Maybe everything will be fine and then I'll sleep better tomorrow night.
my approach fortunately does not involve numbers, calculus, measurement and just straight observation in a What You See Is What You Get kind of way!