blockend
Member
This will be nothing new to the gurus amongst you, but a small anecdote for the newbies. I recently shot five rolls of 100 asa slide film on a Nikkormat with a dead meter. Lighting was flat and even, and I took exposure readings from a phone app roughly every 30 minutes. The exposures were spot on. Last weekend I shot two rolls of Tri-X rated at 1600 on a Yashica rangefinder, and locked the exposure at 1/250 at f11 for both rolls. The exposures were once again correct, and more consistent than a typical auto-exposure camera. A reminder that if the light source doesn't change, neither does the exposure.
In a bid to test the point and shoot capabilities of the Yashica, I also locked focus at about 7ft, just to see how many shots will be in focus with a 45mm lens at f11. I haven't scanned them yet, so it'll be interesting to see. With a Copal shutter the Yashica is almost silent and has one of the fastest (if not the quickest and quietest) shutter of any camera I own. If the resolution of the scans holds up, and the grain is controlled, I'm tempted to use the Yash as my regular street camera.
In a bid to test the point and shoot capabilities of the Yashica, I also locked focus at about 7ft, just to see how many shots will be in focus with a 45mm lens at f11. I haven't scanned them yet, so it'll be interesting to see. With a Copal shutter the Yashica is almost silent and has one of the fastest (if not the quickest and quietest) shutter of any camera I own. If the resolution of the scans holds up, and the grain is controlled, I'm tempted to use the Yash as my regular street camera.