Pioneer
Member
I have no problem working with my rangefinders, my SLRs or my TLRs.
But, the TLR viewfinder truly is magic. It takes me a little time to get comfortable when I swap back after working with my Rollei for only a week on a project. I can only imagine what it would take to make the transition after using a Rolleiflex for as long as you have.
My advice is to keep it around a bit and work with it from time to time. Your resale value probably won't change so I don't think you will lose anything by doing it. After some time you may find yourself warming up to it. If not, sell it and don't worry because it really isn't the end of the world. I suspect that an experienced TLR photographer can probably shoot most of the same things an experienced rangefinder shooter can, and have a bigger negative to work with.
But, the TLR viewfinder truly is magic. It takes me a little time to get comfortable when I swap back after working with my Rollei for only a week on a project. I can only imagine what it would take to make the transition after using a Rolleiflex for as long as you have.
My advice is to keep it around a bit and work with it from time to time. Your resale value probably won't change so I don't think you will lose anything by doing it. After some time you may find yourself warming up to it. If not, sell it and don't worry because it really isn't the end of the world. I suspect that an experienced TLR photographer can probably shoot most of the same things an experienced rangefinder shooter can, and have a bigger negative to work with.