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I shoot with a Mamiya 645 super and was wondering how the 35mm SLR rule of thumb of 1/focal length of the lens for the minimum hand held shutter speed works with MF is it the same?
Thanks
Chris
Ralph:
Great minds think alike - on most things!
... A larger format doesn't make it easier, the lesser enlargement factor might mask it slightly but any slight wobble is amplified by the larger sized format so it evens out ...
I shoot with a Mamiya 645 super and was wondering how the 35mm SLR rule of thumb of 1/focal length of the lens for the minimum hand held shutter speed works with MF is it the same?
Thanks
Chris
You're wrong Ralph. ...
... Yes larger formats mean the " crude Rule of thumb" needs modifying as format size increases. ...
... but comparing standard lens the effects of shutter speed on loss of sharpness are remarkably close, in terms of loss of expected sharpness. ...
... The bottom line is that with a standard lens or wider regardless of format (up to 5x4) 1/30th is generally accepted as being the minimum usable hand held speed, to get fairly consistent results, 1/60th gives a much higher percentage of reasonable s harp images and by a 1/125th there shouldn't be an issue.
What I keep wondering about this is that no matter what shutter speed and focal length of lens we use, if we move, there will be some blurring of the image. The question really is, is this blurring objectionable in the final product, which usually is the print. ...
... If this is true, what is acceptable depends on size of the print as well. One is likely to enlarge images from medium format film much more than 35mm. If this is true, it all depends on focal length of lens, size of film, and size of the print. ...
You're wrong Ralph. If you think of the amount of shake as a variation in degrees around an axis, either one or many, then format size is important. With a larger format a simple variation is greater the further from the axis.
You're wrong Ralph. If you think of the amount of shake as a variation in degrees around an axis, either one or many, then format size is important. With a larger format a simple variation is greater the further from the axis.
It is just a rule of thumb anyhow, so isn't universally accurate; only better than nothing for those who have not yet found out for themselves. I find hand holdable speeds to vary from camera to camera, and even from shot to shot with the same camera, depending on how it is being held.
I don't get your point with the part underlined by me.
Any base tilt or central swing of camera body will have practically* the same effect with any format, as long as the angle of view is the same.
* With larger bodies tilt at edge of body will induce more absolute dislocation in height and focus, but that shall be overdone in optical effect by the angular movement of field of view anyway.
... The way Ralph interprets it you should be able to hand hold a 55mm lens on a MF camera and get much sharper results than with a 55mm lens on a 35mm camera at the same speed but apart from the format factor that just isn't the case. ...
... Taking that logic further using a 17mm lens on a 35mm camera it should be very much easier to use hand held at slow speeds but in fact the opposite is true. ...
... So there's a point where "the rule of thumb" breaks down and other factors become more important. However with a standard focal length lens and longer as the angle of view narrows the "rule of thumb" becomes a rough and ready reminder that camera shake becomes more critical requiring higher shutter speeds with telephoto lenses.
... The annoying bit is that every time it fails, it is *important* pictures!
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