• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

mini soft releases -- worth it?

Fusion Energy

A
Fusion Energy

  • 2
  • 0
  • 44
The Outhouse

A
The Outhouse

  • 2
  • 2
  • 54

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
203,472
Messages
2,855,305
Members
101,858
Latest member
FreeRanger
Recent bookmarks
0

bessa_L_R3a

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jan 3, 2008
Messages
105
Location
Jersey City,
Format
35mm RF
they look so cool, and all those colors. I figured maybe a red one on my black body. Anybody know if they really help shooting at 1/15 or 1/8 with a steady hand?
 
I use a regular soft release on my M6 and a mini on a Rollei and find that they really do help hold the camera steadier. I like them a lot, plus you can color coordinate!

Richard Wasserman
 
I like my Mini Soft Release. Caveat: may lead to inadvertent exposure.

They work well for me on my Bessa L [which has exposure lock] and on my M3 which does not. Previously, I was in the habit of winding my film on immediately after an exposure. With my double-stroke M3, I now make one stroke after the exposure and try to remember to make the second stroke before I expose. I'm still forgetting the latter. They do work well, and I recommend them.
 
there´s an on-off switch on the R3a which locks the shutter, I think, so accidental exposure wouldn´t be a problem. I don´t understand why there wouldn´t be a lock on all cameras to prevent this sort of thing.

I´ll go ahead and buy a mini ...

Thanks!
 
I used a soft release with the M6, because I hated using the camera otherwise. The release point is near the bottom of the travel of the shutter release.

With most cameras, it's somewhere around the 2/3 or 3/4 point. With the M6, it felt like you almost had to bottom out the release.

The only other camera with which I use a soft release is a Rolleiflex SL 35 M. With this camera, the film advance sits much too high, and you have to hook your finger at an odd angle to reach the shutter release.

More recently, one of the nicest shutter releases is on the Carl Zeiss Zeiss Ikon. It requires just the right amount of pressure. The travel is short, and it's predictable.
 
I'm a convert. The Minis enhance almost any camera, but I find them especially useful with the Contax rangefinders and the Canon P and 7. I like the regular Abrahamsson soft releases even more, but they're too big for a number of cameras (such as those with controls surrounding the shutter release). However, they are great for the Leica Ms, and a real luxury for a Minolta SRT.
 
I haven't really decided if they help or not, but they definitely don't hurt! :smile:

They give me a more sure feel on the release button. Whether they actually allow me to shoot a stop slower is unknown. I have them on 2 of the cameras I regularly use. I don't really miss them either.
 
I like them, but keep losing them. Anyone have any suggestions?
 
I've got a reg soft release for my Canon 7 and M3, would hate to shoot without them. Whether it actually helps steady or not, I don't know, but they really help with comfort in shooting. I also picked up a mini for use with various cameras, Canonet, Spotmatic, Electro 35 GSN, feels great on these as well. Though if it fits, the regular soft release is better.
 
The Mini's are nice on my Voigtlanders, as well as Pentacon-Sixes, and Exakta 66.

I just got a silver regular from Tom A. for my new button-rewind Leica M2, which just arrived today. Helps alot in reality, and works well, when shooting at 1/15th and 1/8, in no-light conditions.

I think I may pick up some of the regular softies for my Minolta SRT's.
 
I have them on my Kiev's, and a Leica CL I had. The shutter on those bodies is in a depression (so it wouldn't go off in a bag) but that made pressing the shutter without tilting the camera awkward for me. I used a small screw for a while, and determined that such a device actually did help. So I bought a few mini soft releases. I'm kind of surprised they aren't more common in camera shops.
 
they look so cool, and all those colors. I figured maybe a red one on my black body. Anybody know if they really help shooting at 1/15 or 1/8 with a steady hand?

If you mean an Abrahamsson release -definitely yes
Mark
 
I have two regular softies and use one on my 1951 Rollei and the other in the bag for the RF cameras. I always take it off when the camera goes back in the bag. Too many blank frames! I think they really help me with the slow shutter speeds.
Vic
 
I use it on my Bessa R3A and very like it. It acts very smooth, as a tiny "cable release".
 
Keep an Extra in a Fuji Film Canister.

I like them, but keep losing them. Anyone have any suggestions?

Here's the suggestion that you asked for.

There's an old saying; buy an extra & keep it handy,
then you will NEVER Need It.

To that end, I always carry an extra & I put it in a clear, or semi-clear Fuji Film Canister.

This also provides you with a place to put the one on
the body, when you need to use a cable release.

I use standard Soft Touch Releases & Love Them.
 
The MiniSoftrelease fits my Hasselblad 501CM just fine with all the CFi/CFE lenses I tried.
 

Attachments

  • MiniSoftHassy.jpg
    MiniSoftHassy.jpg
    36.4 KB · Views: 199
I echo what Jim Jones said.I need them when the temps. drop below -15c.
I wonder if a very small bit of super glue,on the very tip, would help them stay put?
 
No super glue! A drop of clear nail polish will keep the Softie from unscreing, and still allow you to remove it if you choose to.


I echo what Jim Jones said.I need them when the temps. drop below -15c.
I wonder if a very small bit of super glue,on the very tip, would help them stay put?
 
I have one somewhere that came with an Ebay purchase, I found it made sweet FA difference, sure they may fit a fat finger better but they don't really help at all except at a cosmetic level.

IaN
 
what ever you do don't try gluing them Cost me a camera when the glue seeped into the shutter. If you must glue then hold the camera upside down to keep the glue from running into it. May still mess up your release
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom