I actually meant I focus with my left hand and shoot with right. The handle looks absolutely beautiful. Love the wooden bit.
Would really love a right side one with a release.
Sorry if my answer was a little obscure.
When i wrote that other cameras are made the opposite way, i was thinking about all those big cameras using 120 film, which have handle and release button in the same place. Specifically: Mamiya Press, Graflex XL, and all the small Linhofs.
While those cameras are not exactly the speediest ones for handheld shooting, all allow to adjust focus and then shoot, without repositioning your right hand.
In the end, the difference is made by how you use your camera. I never used my 6x7 for fast shooting, and while i loved to use it handheld, i always tried to brace to a tree, pole, or something like that, to decrease the chance of micro-blur.
I have always feared the vibrations induced by the curtain shutter, but now i can say that's not as bad as it sounds.
Now i am more a large format lens collector (from mid '800 to the sixties), and i definitely shoot less pictures than i used to do. Pentax digital for travel pics, and large format for more serious stuff. If i am lazy, i use XP2, in 120 rolls, cause it can be developed for a cheap price, like a standard colour negative.
I mostly shoot 6x9 and 6x12, using a folding press/technical camera.
Nevertheless, i have kept my P67, while all the other MF cameras have gone (or will go in the near future).
One of the reasons (which is often overlooked) is that the focal plane shutter allows to experiment with "foreign" optics, either using the bellows or adapting a P67 bajonet to a lens made for another camera.
I have a Pentacon Six bellows and a Meyer/Pentacon 500mm adapted for the Pentax. I had a Zodiak fisheye (too tough to be adapted), and still have a CZJ Sonnar 300mm (so simple to adapt, that i never had the job done!).
have fun
CJ
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