xtolsniffer
Member
I may be having an existential crisis, so forgive the slight rambling, but I would be interested in your views...
I started off with 35mm, and I still very much enjoy using that format, especially the older more mechanical cameras such as the Nikon F2. Quite a few years ago at the height of the digital-dump I picked up an RB67 which had always been my dream camera. Over the years I found I wasn't using it as much as I expected due to the bulk and weight, so picked up a rather broken Mamiya C330 which I fixed and really enjoyed using, not just for the camera but for the conversations you got into with people when using it.
Just recently I've been looking at the images I have shot at both 35mm and 6x6; during lock-down in the UK this often resulted in similar images of the same things within the limited range from home that we were allowed to go. I tend to print to 10x8 or 12x16 in my darkroom so grain from the HP5+ that I use in both formats is pretty visible in the 35mm shots. What I have found is that I rather like grain from the 35mm, it looks more, for want of a better word, 'authentic', and I wasn't sure what I was really getting from using MF.
Have I lost my MF mojo? What is it about shooting MF that gets you going? Is it the process, the cameras, the image quality? If it's image quality, what aspects of MF images get you excited? Just curious...
I started off with 35mm, and I still very much enjoy using that format, especially the older more mechanical cameras such as the Nikon F2. Quite a few years ago at the height of the digital-dump I picked up an RB67 which had always been my dream camera. Over the years I found I wasn't using it as much as I expected due to the bulk and weight, so picked up a rather broken Mamiya C330 which I fixed and really enjoyed using, not just for the camera but for the conversations you got into with people when using it.
Just recently I've been looking at the images I have shot at both 35mm and 6x6; during lock-down in the UK this often resulted in similar images of the same things within the limited range from home that we were allowed to go. I tend to print to 10x8 or 12x16 in my darkroom so grain from the HP5+ that I use in both formats is pretty visible in the 35mm shots. What I have found is that I rather like grain from the 35mm, it looks more, for want of a better word, 'authentic', and I wasn't sure what I was really getting from using MF.
Have I lost my MF mojo? What is it about shooting MF that gets you going? Is it the process, the cameras, the image quality? If it's image quality, what aspects of MF images get you excited? Just curious...