Alan Gales
Member
She has a very nice nose.
I agree!
She has a very nice nose.
I reckon the ultimate roll film camera for portraits is either the Mamiya RZ67 or RB67. Both camera have a rotating back which can be turned to "portrait" orientation without turning the camera. The bellows focussing system means all lenses (ok, not the huge telephotos) focus close enough for a full face portrait. The on-film format is 6x7 which delivers visibly better quality than the 6x4.5 format
The Hasselblad always prompted a twing of resentment. I paid for a 6x6 camera, carried it, shot with it, but ended up with 6x4.5 pictures after cropping to portrait format. And the 150mm lens, one of the finest ever made, would not focus close enough for a face portrait without the nuisance of an extension tube. To finish the rant, in an ideal world Victor Hasselblad should have produced the Hasselblad RZ 67 or RB 67 instead of leaving it for Mamiya to get right!
None of my portraits are cropped, The only time I adjust them is for leveling purposes. The 80mm is a joy to shoot with, when focusing you need to use the outer ring on the focus screen instead of the split screen portion. When shooting with it wide open i just take my time, and after a while its easy and you start to trust yourself. now, when I focus I never second guess myself =)Great series Wharris. Did you shoot portrait or cropped later? How is to shoot portrait?
As suggested by a few of the others I would recommend the Mamiya RB or RZ for the job. I just finished scanning a few negs from yesterday, first one is taken with 127mm at 4.8, the other with 180mm (aperture I don't recall). Neither of them are cropped. Both lenses are the latest K/L version, taken with a ProSD and prism finder model 2, wonderful for portraits and a nice workout for the arms. Minimum focusing distances (from film plane) are 639mm and 1,099mm respectively. If you add extension rings the table applies.
rh-cgn
If you want to fill the frame with a face, go longer in focal length... It's better to have a longer focal length and step back than to use a shorter one and step closer....
It's not the wide angle lens that will distort faces, it's the laws of perspective.
Amen.
Thanks for the samples. Been seriously looking at the 6x7 Mamiyas. They look great and aren't very expensive. Found one with the 140mm Macro, but without the eye level prism. Would like one, do you use one? What about the weight, good to walk around with?
One thing that puzzled me a bit were the data for different Mamiya lenses I came across. It looks like some of the other lenses focus closer and give greater magnification.
Dead Link Removed
Cheers, Wojtek
Thanks for the samples. Been seriously looking at the 6x7 Mamiyas. They look great and aren't very expensive. Found one with the 140mm Macro, but without the eye level prism. Would like one, do you use one? What about the weight, good to walk around with?
One thing that puzzled me a bit were the data for different Mamiya lenses I came across. It looks like some of the other lenses focus closer and give greater magnification.
Dead Link Removed
Cheers, Wojtek
They are gorgeous cameras. But I HIGHLY recommend you see and hold one before you buy. They are HUGE.
They are gorgeous cameras. But I HIGHLY recommend you see and hold one before you buy. They are HUGE.
I haven't held one for about 20 years. I'll have to try one before I buy definitely.
Just looked at a nice Pentax 67 with a Macro. Very nice. Have to sleep on it.
yes a wonderful, cheap and easy one. once you've got used to the parallax indicator on the matte screen, you even don't need the paramender for portraits.Mamiya C330 will get you extremely close. Just make sure to use a Paramender to account for parallax. Regret selling mine....
Back in the old days India was a place where having the smallest camera and the quitest shutter was a definite plus... at least for candid portraits.
Now it's less likely to see a whole crowd jumping in between the camera and your subject
If you don't try to "steal" street portraits, but you approach your subject before firing the shutter, any medium format camera with a longish lens would do the job.
Some cameras need more application, some can even limit your choices, that's all... nothing that can't be overcome in a way or the other.
I can testify that: probably my best pictures were done in Afghanistan (some even done while on horsemount!) with an humble Seagull 6x6 with no meter an a fixed 75mm focal. It was a cheap chinese copy of a Rolleicord, really a piece of crap, compared to the MF cameras i i purchased afterwards.
Nevertheless, what i consider my best all-time portrait (two falconeers with their birds of prey) was taken with the Seagull TLR.
Having said all that, a good camera helps a lot
If you decided for the Pentax 6x7, i second your choice.
After the Seagull, i owned a Yashica 124-G, a Bronica SQa, an Hasselblad 500 C/M, and still own a Rolleiflex, a Mamiya Super 23, and of course a Pentax 67. The latter is by far the best, if you don't do studio work with flashes.
If you do, there were two leaf-shutter optics made exactly for that... but i'd buy a Mamiya RB or RZ for studio use.
Where the Pentax 67 shines is for mixed use: part handheld and part on tripod, in-studio or outside.
With the wooden handle, and with the bottom of the camera resting on your palm, the camera is not so vibration-prone as some people think.
BTW, the Macro 140mm is both cheap and good, i think you won't regret buying one.
Despite some mixed reviews, i enjoyed a lot the 120mm Soft. I had it on loan for some time, and i liked very much the portraits i have done with it!
cheers
CJ
Sent from my Android tablet
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