Pupfish
Member
I'd side with Keith here, what is it about 35mm you find lacking? The best work in 35mm still beats sloppy MF work. Is it a handicap due to film resolution limits? The old rationale for MF is pretty thin these days, and that was negative films didn't have good enough resolution in 35mm for larger prints than 8x10. #2 argument in favor was leaf-shutter lenses for daylight-balanced flash sync speeds. These are mostly moot points nowadays.
But I own and enjoy a medium format camera, a recent purchase. 645 still has a sweet spot for ultimate resolution using the best wide angle lenses and scanning to print. It also has great utility for darkroom prints between 16x20 and 20x24 as there's less light loss than from 35mm (reciprocity thing), defects and dust get enlarged less, too.
It introduces format constraints like a smaller DOF than 35mm for the same view. There are far, far fewer lens choices at the extremes. There are almost no fast lenses at all.
But I own and enjoy a medium format camera, a recent purchase. 645 still has a sweet spot for ultimate resolution using the best wide angle lenses and scanning to print. It also has great utility for darkroom prints between 16x20 and 20x24 as there's less light loss than from 35mm (reciprocity thing), defects and dust get enlarged less, too.
It introduces format constraints like a smaller DOF than 35mm for the same view. There are far, far fewer lens choices at the extremes. There are almost no fast lenses at all.