Disclaimer: This is a long post
I have a growing interest in LF photography, unfortunately I know little about it. I also don’t know anybody who even shoots film anymore, let alone LF for me to pick their brain. I have read The Camera, The Negative, and The Print, and find the concepts fairly straight forward and intuitive. Maybe I am missing something, because when reading posts from LFers, things sound more complicated than I’d initially thought. There is obviously a lot more to it. My general impression is that it’s much more difficult and involved than shooting MF, let alone 35mm. Is this (and the apparent price) why few people shoot LF???
There are more of us than you might think. It isn't that awful expensive, as you will shoot far fewer shots, with a higher percentage of success. If you can afford to shoot four or five rolls of 120 in an outing, you can entertain yourself with a view camera on an identical outing for about the same. LF is at once the simplest and most demanding type of photography. I know that sounds cryptic. Most of the "complicated" things we disscuss here are very fine points among accomplished LFr's talking shop. Most of it isn't that important while you are learning the basics.
I’ve read that “A User’s Guide to the View Camera” by Jim Stone is a good place to start, and I do plan on reading it, and likely a couple others that you may recommend as necessary.
Steve Simmons book is good as well.
I don’t want to spend all my time reading, rather than doing, but obviously I need the basics. Also, I originally figured I’d just develop the film in trays, but I’m gathering it’s not as simple as that, potentially even more difficult than taking the picture in the first place. Now, I’m not against difficult, I just want to have an idea what I may be getting into before spending a lot of money (which never seems to end, apparently).
Tray development works just fine, and as a beginner you will have less problems with it than some of the other methods, and any problems you may have will be easily regognized and corrected. I highly reccomend it as a starting place.
Get fancy later.
I want to get into LF for a number of reasons. I want to be able to produce a single negative at a time with the control this allows. I want to explore the Zone System more fully. I love using my 6X6 MF camera for the size of the negative, and for the slowing down of “process”. I want to go further, but I don’t know exactly how I should do it. I’ve read other posts recently on the same subject, but everyone’s situation is different.
Essentially, I shoot everything outdoors- no studio work, so I would be lugging my gear. I do mainly landscapes, but I also want the versatility to shoot subjects at short distances, maybe even some close-ups. I feel a full range in movements is important, as I don’t want to limit myself. I see the new and very expensive cameras have asymmetric rear movements to help maintain focus. Is this available on older/less expensive cameras? Is the price worth it to help a beginner learn?
I guess if pressed to choose 3 lenses I’d use the most, it would be a wide-angle, a normal lens and a moderate telephoto. I would want a system that is not that old that requires me to be a camera repair technician. I’m not interested in “vintage”, I’m interested in “fully working” Would a rail camera be better for versatility movement-wise, or a lighter field camera? What is the weight difference anyway? I see a lot of Cambo rail cameras going relatively cheap on ebay- are they any good? What about cameras with drop beds vs without- why the difference? Does it affect the amount of movements?
Most any field or monorail camera will have more than enough movements to get in to trouble with. You will run out of lens coverage before movements in most cases. Photos of cameras twisted into pretzels are largely marketing. For most landscapes I shoot, you would have to examine the camera a bit to see the movements in play. If your bend is architectural more movements becomes more useful. Drop bed cameras do so to A) get the front out of the way for wide lenses, and B) attempt make up for a lack of back tilt as in the case of some press type cameras.
How does the lens/shutter/lensboard system work? I know you need a lensboard to fit the camera, and the shutter is a part of that, which a lens is then mounted to. How do you change lenses? Do you have a different lensboard for each lens, and leave them as a unit? How do you decide on a shutter type/size?
The lens is placed in a shutter. The type of lens and aperture size determines the size/type of shutter. The lense/shutter combo is mounted to a lensboard, and each lens/shutter/lensboard unit is what is changed.
I guess the biggest question is last- what size. I don’t have an enlarger for big negs, and would rather just start off with contact printing them- I assume this is the easiest way to make prints. Is the process any different than making a contact print of my roll negs, or doing a print from a projected image? Anyway, For this reason, I would want an 8X10, as I prefer that size of print, and get a 5X7 reducing back, as I like that format as well. Is this reasonable? Will lens coverage and bellows extension limit a single camera being used for different film sizes?
The process of contact printing is very much like contact printing your roll negs. Most of us use spring backed frames for best paper to neg contact.
8x10 makes nice contact prints, but how far are you willing to carry the camera? 5x7 is not as heavy, and makes a nice little jewel of a contact print, but will you wish it was 8x10? 11x14? It's all trade offs.
So what cameras should I be looking at? What costs (loaded question I know, but I think I’ve given enough info here to get a ballpark idea)? What are the prices of lenses? How important is a fast lens in LF photography anyway?
You will be looking for a camera that fits your budget. An older camera in good shape is perfectly usable, and does not vary much in overall design and concept from a newer one. You can make astounding photographs with most any of them, so I would say look for used. You won't be in any danger of losing money if you do your homework and get a good deal. APUG classifieds is a superb place to find LF gear.
Well this isn’t the longest post I’ve seen at APUG, but it must be close. Hopefully many will take the time to read it and respond. If the answers to all these questions are in a single up-to-date book, give me the title. Thanks.
As the technology of LF is pretty traditional, from a camera basics point of view, a book written today isn't going to contain that much new than one that is twenty years old. Its the stocks, processes, lens designs/coatings and minor doodads that change the most.
Disclaimer: This is a long post
Essentially, I shoot everything outdoors- no studio work, so I would be lugging my gear. I do mainly landscapes, but I also want the versatility to shoot subjects at short distances, maybe even some close-ups. I feel a full range in movements is important, as I don’t want to limit myself. I see the new and very expensive cameras have asymmetric rear movements to help maintain focus. Is this available on older/less expensive cameras? Is the price worth it to help a beginner learn?
The sickness claims another soul.
More complicated? LF is IMHO less comlicated. In fact its about as basic as it gets---one sheet of film = one negative that you can make a contact prints from, just by following the diections on the yellow envelopes. Of course it can get as complicated (and as expensive) as you want from there on in, but essentially you are the one who calls the shots.
Fear not. You'll find it a heck of a lot of fun.
... I ended up spending just over 30 thousand dollars to get my dream gear. The thing is, Camera, lens and film is not only gear you need. Welcome in LF, but do not hurry!
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