With any camera, you'll get a sharper image by using a tripod, but some kinds of shots just can't be gotten easily with a tripod, and if a tripod causes you to leave the camera at home, then you can't shoot anything.
These are handheld with flash, Weegee-style, so that's one approach--
http://www.echonyc.com/~goldfarb/photo/halloween/index.htm
These were shots that should have been taken with a tripod, but I was just casually walking around with the Technika without being particularly on a photographic expedition, and if I had to carry a tripod, the camera would have stayed at home--
Handheld with 6x7 back--
Also, remember the rangefinder is still useful with a tripod for portraits or any kind of action where you want to focus and have film in the back at the same time.
I've even done a little impromptu bird photography (large, relatively approachable birds) with a cammed 360/5.5 Tele-Xenar and rollfilm back. The limiting factor there is the slow max shutter speed, but if you're shooting something like herons or waterfowl, they can hold still.
Do you folks find that you can make sharp images hand holding such a large camera?
I have shot the Tech V handheld (or monopod-held!), but rarely do so. But when taking portraits with the camera on tripod, it's much easier and faster to use with a rangefinder and multifocus viewer than having to duck under a dark cloth, focus, come out into the light, close the lens, insert a filmholder, pull the darkslide, and hope the subject has not moved much!Thanks guys for responding. I have to admit that I have never tried hand holding a 4X5. All the press work from the past not withstanding, the prospect seems a little daunting to me.
Do you folks find that you can make sharp images hand holding such a large camera?
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